The Dead Sea: Myth, History and Politics

The Dead Sea: Myth, History and Politics

by Barbara Kreiger (Author)

Synopsis

The Dead Sea is unlike any other place on earth. Situated a quarter mile below sea level, so saline it can't support life, surrounded by a desolate, haunting landscape, it is not just a geologic feature but a source of mystery and religious faith. In elegant and vivid prose, Barbara Kreiger re-creates and analyzes the myths and legends surrounding the site and examines both its natural history and its gradual and difficult exploration. But The Dead Sea (originally published as Living Waters in 1988) is more than a detailed and delightful travelogue. It is also an inquiry into the human and political drama that has swirled around this mysterious place for more than 12,000 years. In an afterword to the new edition, Kreiger shows how the sea in the post-Peace Accord era may come to take on a new symbolism: with the perpetual need for water and a thriving mineral industry as common bonds, Israel and Jordan, two traditional antagonists whose border bisects the Sea, may find themselves joining forces to preserve its fragile ecosystem against the threats of technology and tourism. Thus the Dead Sea, whose fate is inextricably bound up with the social, political, and technological lives of the two nations who share it, may become the scene where separate national interests are joined rather than divided.

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More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 266
Publisher: Brandeis University Press
Published: 28 Feb 1997

ISBN 10: 087451827X
ISBN 13: 9780874518276

Author Bio
YEHUDA KURTZER is president of The Shalom Hartman Institute of North America.