David Tal的回复

IF 0.5 3区 社会学 Q3 AREA STUDIES Middle Eastern Studies Pub Date : 2023-04-28 DOI:10.1080/00263206.2023.2203572
D. Tal
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I am inclined to believe that Professor Petersen did not misinterpret my book, but rather, his conspicuous omission of any reference to the central theme – exploring the genesis and evolution of the unique bond between Israel and the United States – leads me to surmise that he may have inadvertently reviewed an entirely different book. my book delves into the intricate elements and concepts that have shaped the special relationship between Israel and the United States, with a historical lens that traces its roots to the era preceding President Woodrow Wilson. By adopting a longue durée approach, the book enables readers to discern the various undercurrents and connective threads that have guided the trajectory of this alliance over the years. Regrettably, Professor Petersen seemed to overlook this perspective and failed to recognize the unifying thread woven throughout the book. For instance, the Anglo-American relationship is of marginal relevance in my work, and the extent of coverage it receives is commensurate with its significance to the Israeli-American alliance. Yet, the book that Professor Peterson reviewed led him to lament that the author displayed ‘scant concern for the Anglo-American relationship [...] opting for an incredibly detailed depiction of American policy and the prevailing circumstances in Israel’. Professor Petersen’s discontent stemmed from the fact that the book he read delved extensively into ‘American policy and realities on the ground in Israel’, while allocating minimal attention to the Anglo-American relationship. It was at this juncture that I began to suspect Professor Petersen had reviewed a book other than my own, as my work is devoted exclusively to the Israeli-US relationship, making it entirely logical to provide ‘an incredibly detailed description of American policy and realities on the ground in Israel’. As I continued reading his review, my conviction that Professor Petersen had indeed read a different book grew stronger, with the increasing mentions of subjects that were tangential or irrelevant to my book’s central theme. And these led me to realize one more thing. Professor Petersen falls into the category of reviewers who don’t critique a book per se, but rather propose what they would have preferred to see within its pages. In addition to mentioning components that bear little relevance to the book’s primary theme, he raises issues that he believes should have been incorporated, instead of the subjects the author deliberately chose to include. Consequently, Professor Petersen’s disappointment stems from the scarcity of references to Anglo-American relations, as well as his distress over the omission of the ‘plight of the Palestinians’. Simultaneously, Professor Petersen expressed displeasure with the mention of the ‘sixty-six-year-old Florida cab driver’, seemingly overlooking the fact that the cab driver’s insights reveal just as much, if not more, about the unique bond between Israel and the United States as any official statements on the matter. I am confident that Professor Petersen’s political views did not cloud his reading of the book, and the sole reason his review appears","PeriodicalId":47118,"journal":{"name":"Middle Eastern Studies","volume":"59 1","pages":"692 - 693"},"PeriodicalIF":0.5000,"publicationDate":"2023-04-28","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"A reply by David Tal\",\"authors\":\"D. 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By adopting a longue durée approach, the book enables readers to discern the various undercurrents and connective threads that have guided the trajectory of this alliance over the years. Regrettably, Professor Petersen seemed to overlook this perspective and failed to recognize the unifying thread woven throughout the book. For instance, the Anglo-American relationship is of marginal relevance in my work, and the extent of coverage it receives is commensurate with its significance to the Israeli-American alliance. Yet, the book that Professor Peterson reviewed led him to lament that the author displayed ‘scant concern for the Anglo-American relationship [...] opting for an incredibly detailed depiction of American policy and the prevailing circumstances in Israel’. 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引用次数: 0

摘要

彼得森教授似乎并不特别喜欢我写的这本书,虽然他有权发表自己的意见,但我发现自己对他的评论感到困惑。尽管他引用了我的名字作为作者,他声称要批评的书的标题与我的一致,但他的评论内容与我写的作品毫无相似之处。我倾向于相信,彼得森教授并没有误解我的书,相反,他明显省略了对中心主题的任何提及——探索以色列和美国之间独特纽带的起源和演变——这让我猜测,他可能无意中回顾了一本完全不同的书。我的书深入探讨了塑造以色列和美国之间特殊关系的复杂元素和概念,历史镜头可以追溯到伍德罗·威尔逊总统之前的时代。通过采用长期的方法,这本书使读者能够辨别多年来指导这一联盟发展轨迹的各种暗流和连接线。令人遗憾的是,彼得森教授似乎忽视了这一观点,未能认识到贯穿全书的统一主线。例如,英美关系在我的工作中无关紧要,它的报道范围与其对以色列-美国联盟的意义相称。然而,彼得森教授评论的这本书让他哀叹,作者“对英美关系缺乏关注[…],而是选择了对美国政策和以色列当前局势的极其详细的描述”。彼得森教授的不满源于他读到的这本书深入探讨了“美国在以色列的政策和现实”,而对英美关系的关注却很少。正是在这个关键时刻,我开始怀疑彼得森教授审阅了一本我自己的书之外的书,因为我的工作完全致力于以色列与美国的关系,因此提供“对美国在以色列的政策和现实的令人难以置信的详细描述”是完全合乎逻辑的。随着我继续阅读他的评论,我越来越坚信彼得森教授确实读过一本不同的书,越来越多的人提到与我的书的中心主题无关的主题。这些让我意识到了另一件事。彼得森教授属于这样一类评论家,他们不批评一本书本身,而是提出他们更喜欢在书中看到的内容。除了提到与本书主要主题几乎没有关联的部分外,他还提出了他认为应该纳入的问题,而不是作者故意选择纳入的主题。因此,彼得森教授的失望源于缺乏对英美关系的提及,以及他对省略“巴勒斯坦人的困境”的担忧。与此同时,彼得森教授对提到这位“66岁的佛罗里达州出租车司机”表示不满,似乎忽略了一个事实,即这位出租车司机的见解揭示了以色列和美国之间的独特纽带,即使不是更多,也与任何关于此事的官方声明一样多。我相信彼得森教授的政治观点并没有影响他对这本书的阅读,这也是他发表评论的唯一原因
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A reply by David Tal
It seems Professor Petersen was not particularly fond of the book I authored, and while he is entitled to his opinion, I find myself perplexed by his review. Although he references my name as the author and the title of the book he purports to critique matches my own, the content of his review bears no resemblance to the work I penned. I am inclined to believe that Professor Petersen did not misinterpret my book, but rather, his conspicuous omission of any reference to the central theme – exploring the genesis and evolution of the unique bond between Israel and the United States – leads me to surmise that he may have inadvertently reviewed an entirely different book. my book delves into the intricate elements and concepts that have shaped the special relationship between Israel and the United States, with a historical lens that traces its roots to the era preceding President Woodrow Wilson. By adopting a longue durée approach, the book enables readers to discern the various undercurrents and connective threads that have guided the trajectory of this alliance over the years. Regrettably, Professor Petersen seemed to overlook this perspective and failed to recognize the unifying thread woven throughout the book. For instance, the Anglo-American relationship is of marginal relevance in my work, and the extent of coverage it receives is commensurate with its significance to the Israeli-American alliance. Yet, the book that Professor Peterson reviewed led him to lament that the author displayed ‘scant concern for the Anglo-American relationship [...] opting for an incredibly detailed depiction of American policy and the prevailing circumstances in Israel’. Professor Petersen’s discontent stemmed from the fact that the book he read delved extensively into ‘American policy and realities on the ground in Israel’, while allocating minimal attention to the Anglo-American relationship. It was at this juncture that I began to suspect Professor Petersen had reviewed a book other than my own, as my work is devoted exclusively to the Israeli-US relationship, making it entirely logical to provide ‘an incredibly detailed description of American policy and realities on the ground in Israel’. As I continued reading his review, my conviction that Professor Petersen had indeed read a different book grew stronger, with the increasing mentions of subjects that were tangential or irrelevant to my book’s central theme. And these led me to realize one more thing. Professor Petersen falls into the category of reviewers who don’t critique a book per se, but rather propose what they would have preferred to see within its pages. In addition to mentioning components that bear little relevance to the book’s primary theme, he raises issues that he believes should have been incorporated, instead of the subjects the author deliberately chose to include. Consequently, Professor Petersen’s disappointment stems from the scarcity of references to Anglo-American relations, as well as his distress over the omission of the ‘plight of the Palestinians’. Simultaneously, Professor Petersen expressed displeasure with the mention of the ‘sixty-six-year-old Florida cab driver’, seemingly overlooking the fact that the cab driver’s insights reveal just as much, if not more, about the unique bond between Israel and the United States as any official statements on the matter. I am confident that Professor Petersen’s political views did not cloud his reading of the book, and the sole reason his review appears
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来源期刊
Middle Eastern Studies
Middle Eastern Studies AREA STUDIES-
CiteScore
0.70
自引率
0.00%
发文量
93
期刊介绍: Since its launch in 1964 Middle Eastern Studies has become required reading for all those with a serious concern in understanding the modern Middle East. Middle Eastern Studies provides the most up-to-date academic research on the history and politics of the Arabic-speaking countries in the Middle East and North Africa as well as on Turkey, Iran and Israel, particularly during the nineteenth and twentieth centuries.
期刊最新文献
Resilient locusts, ignorant people, modern state and scientific knowledge: a late Ottoman human-animal-state history Gifting books, bribing elites, reaching the masses: Italian fascist propaganda in Turkey, 1923–38 Hüseyin Cahit Yalçın – an introduction to his life and works The role of historical knowledge among contemporary Druze in Lebanon: applying anthropology to preserve intangible cultural heritage Understanding Turkey’s attitude towards the dispute in Palestine from late 1947 to early 1949
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