The Ends of the Earth: A Journey at the Dawn of the 21st CenturyIn The Ends of the Earth, Robert D. Kaplan travels from the devastated countries of West Africa and the fundamentalist enclaves of Egypt and Iran to the culturally explosive lands of Central Asia, India, Pakistan, and Southeast Asia with hardly more than a notebook and a backpack. Kaplan's intention was to investigate firsthand the effect of population explosion and environmental degradation in these countries and to see how the various cultures he encountered responded to them. But as he traveled, talking to gun smugglers and government ministers, warlords and shantytown dwellers, he discovered that the real problem, in places as far afield as Sierra Leone and western China, was the reemergence of longstanding cultural rivalries and the dissolution of national boundaries as regions redefine themselves along ethnic and historic lines. Kaplan's ground-level experiences allow him to avoid grandiose generalizations about the clash of civilizations and to replace them with intimate portraits of the men and women he encounters: Rafighdoost, Khomeini's fiercely loyal chauffeur; Ali Abdel Razag, keeper of the Aswan High Dam; and Ayshe Tanrikulu, a squatter on Golden Mountain, a shantytown on the outskirts of Ankara, who hopes that her sons will one day be doctors or engineers. It is in the squalor of daily existence and in people's fears, frustrations, and dreams that Kaplan looks for the key to a country's future. The Ends of the Earth offers an intimate portrait of the devastated parts of the world, whose cultural disasters - like those in Bosnia, Chechnya, and Rwanda today - will dominate our attention and remake the world of tomorrow. |
Contents
Preface XI | 1 |
From Graham Greene to Thomas Malthus? | 32 |
Along the Gulf of Guinea | 70 |
Copyright | |
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Abidjan Afghanistan American Anatolia Arab army Asian Assiut Ataturk Azerbaijan Azeri Baku Bangkok bazaar bibliography border Bukhara Cambodia capital Central Asia century China Chinese civil Coast communist culture diplomats East economic Egypt Egyptian embassy ethnic eyes foreign Freetown gecekondus Ghana growth Guinea human hundred Imam India inhabitants Iran Iran's Iranian Islamic journey Kashan Kashgar Khmer Rouge Khomeini Kurds Kyrgyz land Laos Lebanese Liberia lived looked Mekong miles million Moslem mosque mountains Nile Ottoman Pakistan percent Persian Phnom Penh political population Rafighdoost region revolution Reza Rishi Valley river road Russian Samarkand shah Shi'ite Sierra Leone Sinkiang soldiers Soviet Union streets sub-Saharan Africa Tajiks Tashkent taxi Teheran Thai Thailand thousand tion told tourists town Turkestan Turkey Turkic Turkish Turks Uighur Ulug Beg urban Uzbekistan Uzbeks village walls West Africa Western women writes
References to this book
Imagining the Congo: The International Relations of Identity Kevin C. Dunn No preview available - 2003 |