Until the1930s, Americans had little interest in the Middle East, other than as a fantasy playland, depicted in a slew of early Hollywood movies such as the hugely successful “Sheik” movies starring Rudolph Valentino.
A documentary feature film
Try this book:
Power, Faith, and Fantasy: America in the Middle East: 1776 to the Present, by Michael B. Oren
or these:
- American Consuls in the Holy Land, 1832-1914 (America-Holy Land Monographs) (America Holy Land Series) by Ruth Kark
This volume deals with an eventful period in the modern history of Palestine. It provides new insights into the role of the US consuls in the Ottoman Middle East in the special context of the Holy Land. The motivations and functioning of the American consuls in Jerusalem, and of the consular agents in Jaffa and Haifa, are analyzed as part of the US diplomatic and consular activity throughout the world, and of Western involvement in the Ottoman Empire and in Palestine during the century preceding WWI. The processes of cultural, demographic, economic, environmental and settlement change - sometimes at the expense of the local population - and the contribution of the US consuls and American settlers, both Christian and Jewish, to development and modernization of Palestine are discussed.
- The Romance of the Holy Land in American Travel Writing by Brian Yother
This book is the first to engage with the full range of American travel writing about nineteenth-century Ottoman Palestine, and the first to acknowledge the influence of the late-eighteenth-century Barbary captivity narrative on nineteenth-century travel writing about the Middle East. Brian Yothers argues that American travel writing about the Holy Land forms a coherent, if greatly varied, tradition, which can only be fully understood when works by major writers such as Twain and Melville are studied alongside missionary accounts, captivity narratives, chronicles of religious pilgrimages, and travel writing in the genteel tradition.Yothers also examines works by lesser-known authors such as Bayard Taylor, John Lloyd Stephens, and Clorinda Minor, demonstrating that American travel writing is marked by a profound intertextuality with the Hebrew and Christian scriptures and with British and continental travel narratives about the Holy Land. His concluding chapter on Melville's Clarel shows how Melville's poem provides an incisive critique of the nascent imperial discourse discernible in the American texts with which it is in dialogue.
- Guide to America--Holy Land Studies: American Presence by Nathan M. Kaganoff
On it.
Others: here; and here; and here; and also here.
"Fantasy" they claim?
Their's is the fantasizing.
And the "they" are:
the late American writer Gore Vidal,
John Mearsheimer, author of “The Israel Lobby;”
Robert Fisk,
Harvard and Oxford historian Niall Ferguson,
historian Melani McAlister,
TV star Tony Shalhoub,
media expert Jack Shaheen,
and Hollywood writer Alan Sharp,
along with biting commentary in performances by comics Maz Jobrani, Aron Kader and Ahmed Ahmed.
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