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Stranger Magic: Charmed States & the Arabian Nights [Hardcover]

Marina Warner
3.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)

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Book Description

3 Nov 2011

Magic is not simply a matter of the occult arts, but a whole way of thinking, of dreaming the impossible. As such it has tremendous force in opening the mind to new realms of achievement: imagination precedes the fact. It used to be associated with wisdom, understanding the powers of nature, and with technical ingenuity that could let men do things they had never dreamed of before.

The supreme fiction of this magical thinking is the Arabian Nights, with its flying carpets, hidden treasure and sudden revelations. Translated into French and English in the early days of the Enlightenment, this Arabic collection of folk and fairy tales became a huge success with intellectuals, artists and composers. The book's strangeness opened visions of transformation: dreams of flight, speaking objects, virtual money and the power of the word to bring about change. Its tales create a poetic image of the impossible and an unexpectedly modern parable of knowledge and power. Above all they have the fascination of the strange - the belief that true knowledge lies elsewhere, in a mysterious realm of wonder.

As part of her exploration into the prophetic enchantments of the Nights, Marina Warner retells some of the most wonderful and lesser-known stories. She explores the figure of the dark magician or magus, from Solomon to the wicked uncle in 'Aladdin'; the complex vitality of the jinn, or genies; animal metamorphoses and flying carpets. Her narrative reveals that magical thinking, as conveyed by these stories, governs many aspects of experience, even now. In this respect, the East and West have been in fruitful dialogue. Writers and artists in every medium have found themselves by adopting Oriental disguise. With startling originality and impeccable research, this groundbreaking book shows how magic, in the deepest sense, helped to create the modern world, and how profoundly it is still inscribed in the way we think today.



Product details

  • Hardcover: 560 pages
  • Publisher: Chatto & Windus (3 Nov 2011)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0701173319
  • ISBN-13: 978-0701173319
  • Product Dimensions: 16.1 x 4.6 x 24 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 3.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 294,496 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Review

"An epic study of the Arabian Nights...a dissection of the myths in these enduring classics that promises to throw light on the countries from which the stories spring and the lives of women in them" (Mariella Frostrup Observer, Books of the Year )

"Wide-ranging, erudite, wondrously polymathic exploration of the tales of magic... Warner, too is a beguiling storyteller: her fascination with true knowledge embedded in realms of wonder" (Iain Finlayson The Times )

"Her mind is as rich and fascinating as the stories themselves, taking us on a magic carpet from Borges and Goethe, to Edward Said and the movies" (Hanif Kureishi Guardian, Books of the Year )

"Warner's book makes reading The Arabian Nights seem as essential to understanding the Western literary cannon as the King James Bible, and a lot more fun" (Victoria Beale Independent on Sunday )

"436 densely erudite and eclectic pages... Stranger Magic is a scholarly work that often reads like a fireside conversation" (Robin Yassin-Kassab Guardian )

Book Description

A dazzling history of magical thinking, exploring the power of the Arabian Nights and its impact in the West, and retelling some of its wondrous tales. Lavishly illustrated throughout.

Inside This Book (Learn More)
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Front Cover | Copyright | Table of Contents | Excerpt | Index | Back Cover
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
0 of 1 people found the following review helpful
3.0 out of 5 stars It's OK 10 Feb 2013
Format:Hardcover|Amazon Verified Purchase
The subject matter is of great interest but the prose style is so thick and mannered that reading it is a chore. The book could have a third of cut out and the sentence structure could be simpler. Elric Hooper.
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Amazon.com: 4.0 out of 5 stars  2 reviews
7 of 7 people found the following review helpful
3.0 out of 5 stars An interesting study but marred at times with poor writing 2 Dec 2012
By luisamillera - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Hardcover
This is an interesting and at times frustrating study of how tales from the Arabian Nights made their way into European cultural and intellectual thought in a period largely confined to the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries.

Warner's enthusiasm for tracing the cultural effects produced by stories steeped in magic and fantasy on societies facing rapidly modernization is catching and she leads the reader down some fascinating paths as she links the spells cast in the Nights to the talismanic properties of modern currency exchange and the fascination with genies on flying carpets to the technological interventions leading to the rise of flying machines at the turn of the 20th century.

The study's strength, as well as its weakness, is its wide, expansive scope. Warner ranges over a wide variety of material and figures, from Voltaire to Anna May Wong. I sometimes found the jumps too dizzying and disorienting and would have preferred a more slow-paced tour through her large collection of source texts. But Warner does have a tale-weaver's charisma and one is compelled to stay on the journey despite its excessively rapid twists and turns. Warner, I suspect, would say that the scattered manner in which she has organised this thematic study is rather part of the point.

What this book most sorely lacks is a good copy-editor. The study is marred with moments of some severely undisciplined sentences. The worst passages are in her recapitulations of some of the stories from the Nights that preface the different segments of her study, each devoted to a particular, loosely-defined theme.

I would recommend this book to anyone interested in revisiting the influence of the "Orient" to European modernity. Warner's examples, ranging from Goethe to Charlotte Perkins Gilman, provide useful starting points for reconsidering appropriations of the orient to a west increasingly defining its modernity as a process of demystification and disillusionment. Perhaps a clearer prose style would have allowed this study to capture more of the narrative magic contained in the tales comprising The Arabian Nights.
9 of 14 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars The Deep Sanity of Imagination 28 Jun 2012
By schlmiel #32 - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Hardcover|Amazon Verified Purchase
I want to believe that Warner is one of the geniuses of the Counter-enlightenment, that she is at once an artist and an intellectual who sees through the veneer of rationality that both hides the dominance of Enlightenment brutality and coldness and even more deeply conceals and distorts the deeper magic in the knowledge of myth. I love her work, and I take it as a gift from friendlier gods that she writes so intelligently of the imagination and so imaginatively of a level of human intelligence increasingly banished from our midst. She is keeping something indespensible to human sanity and consciousness alive, and I think she is doing so in a time that arcs more and more toward the unforseen disasters of a rationality and a technology that is not friendly to a larger and deeper kind of human existence. This a form of charm that can disenthrall our blind veering toward disaster and reengage us in living acts of intelligent imagination. I say we have more of it.
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