The Hidden Hand: Middle East Fears of Conspiracy

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Palgrave Macmillan, 1998 - Fiction - 420 pages

As the first full-length study of conspiracy theories in the Middle East, The Hidden Hand reveals how such theories play a powerful role in the political life of the region. Placing conspiracy theories in their historical context, Daniel Pipes shows how the idea of the conspiracy has come to suffuse life in the Middle East, from the most private family conversations to the highest and most public levels of politics. Pipes then looks at conspiracies and their strength as a partial explanation for much of the region's problems, including its record of political extremism, its culture of violence, and its lack of modernization. Concluding with speculations about the future of conspiracy theories, Pipes provides a key to understanding the often complicated political culture of the Middle East.

 

Contents

CASE STUDIES
33
GREATER ISRAEL
49
IRANS ISLAMIC REVOLUTION
75
IRAN VERSUS IRAQ VERSUS THE WORLD
87
THE CONSPIRATOR
101
ZIONISTS AND IMPERIALISTS
117
8
163
THE CONSPIRATORS NATURE
193
THE PARANOID STYLE
223
THE TRAUMA OF MODERN ISLAM
289
THE IMPACT OF WESTERN THOUGHT
309
ACTUAL CONSPIRACIES
325
POLITICAL STRUCTURES
353
THE CONSPIRACY THEORY
367
INDEX
391
Copyright

THE CONSPIRATORS METHODS
199

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About the author (1998)

Daniel Pipes is Editor of The Middle East Quarterly and Senior Lecturer at the University of Pennsylvania. He is the author of nine books and the editor of one.

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