Abstract
Beshara Doumani’s book deals with the family dynamics in the Ottoman
Arab lands before the Western hegemony ruled over there, focusing on
“three of the areas usually ignored in the scholarship: provincial regions,
the middle centuries of the Ottoman rule, and middling propertied urban
groups.” (p. 39) Challenging “big isms” such as Orientalism or Islamism,
he aims at historicizing family in Nablus and Tripoli in order to offer a new
and better frame for family, gender and property of this time and freeing
them from stereotypes. The relatively large time period of this study is two
centuries spanning from 1660 to 1860 on the ground that “family life is
best measured by generations, not decades.” (p. 40) The author primarily
relies on the Ottoman court records and utilizes stories of people derived
from these records as the skeleton of the chapters. To him, these registers
create a “communal textual memory,” therefore worthy of attention of not
only legalists, but also of social historians to delve into daily life of ordinary
individuals.