Syria's Peasantry, the Descendants of Its Lesser Rural Notables, and Their Politics
K**G
Authoritative Analysis of Syrian Ba'ath and Hafez Al-Asad
Despite Batatu's penchant for academic flourish and the lack of chapter-to-chapter temporal flow, "Syria's Peasantry..." is an authoritative analysis of the origins and nature of the Syrian Ba'ath Party. Batatu expertly weaves demographical data, anecdotal accounts, and academic hypotheses into a compelling historical construct. Even more, Batatu's incisive insights into the life of Hafez Al-Asad, without drawing prejudicial or unqualified conclusions, breathes vibrancy as well as scholarly vigor into Syria's most enigmatic president. Indeed, some would say Asad's life was as veiled and mysterious as it was Machiavellian, so I found Batatu's conservative "let the reader decide" approach to be personally illuminating.
D**A
Syria's Peasantry
Batatu, emeritus professor at Georgetown University, has now published two similarly large tomes dealing with a Middle Eastern state laboring under a radical regime. Both have long, obscure, and pedantic titles, a vaguely Marxist outlook, and a content that manages to be simultaneously fascinating and infuriating. Fascinating because Batatu has spent decades unearthing, compiling, and comparing data. Here is the place to find a discussion of the electrification of the Syrian countryside, Asad's personality, the evolution of the Ba'th Party, or the various portrayals of peasants by Muslim and Western authors. Infuriating because, as Batutu acknowledges, his study "does not seek to prove or disprove any particular thesis or draw from the accumulated evidence any general theory." Instead, the author is quite content to ferret out the information and leave at the reader's doorstep, for him to make of it what he will.Infuriating too because the book meanders without disciplined from subject to subject, without logic or structure. It does so on the macro level, with two sections devoted to the Syrian peasantry and two to the regime of Hafiz al-Asad - and no explicit connection between them other than the fact that Asad is "Syria's first ruler of peasant extraction." It also does this on the micro level, with one subject tumbling on top of another (Sufism as a source of political quietism among peasants; why mountaineers resort to force more than plains-dwellers; the appeal of communism to peasants).Despite Batatu's disavowal of "any general theory," his choice of subject matter does point to his arguing on one side in the great debate of modern Syrian history: Does the character of the Asad regime derive from its rural or its 'Alawi religious background? Batatu's opus represents a major, if diffuse, effort to prop up the increasingly unsupportable rural thesis.Middle East Quarterly, December 1999
K**R
Solid
Absolutely solid narrative of syria’s social, cultural, religious and political history. The authors intimacy to the subject is clear and the interpretations though subjective, do provide a great sense o logic and realpolitik
Trustpilot
1 month ago
1 month ago