Description:
The popular image of the family and the court of law in Muslim societies is one of traditional, unchanging social frameworks. Iris Agmon suggests an entirely different view, grounded in a detailed study of nineteenth-century Ottoman court records from the flourishing Palestinian port cities of Haifa and Jaffa. She depicts the shari'a Muslim court of law as a dynamic institution, capable of adapting to rapid and profound social changes indeed, of playing an active role in generating these changes. Court and family interact and transform themselves, each other, and the society of which they form part.
Agmon's book is a significant contribution to scholarship on both family history and legal culture in the social history of the Middle East.Review Quotes: "[A] masterly use of Shari'a court records.... Agmon's work is among the best of the new trend in social science discourse that challenges and supplements these earlier studies. An outstanding example is her treatment of the orphan funds in Jaffa and Haifa at the turn of the nineteenth century, and [during] the years leading to WWI, which saw some of the most significant intrusions of the state and local government in managing social welfare.... [Her] work is at once lucid and free from obtrusive jargon, while raising significant methodological questions on the use of court records for socio-historical interpretation, class representation, and the protracted nature of modernity in urban Arab Society."