Jordan’s Proverbs as a Window into Arab Popular Culture: The Fox in the Blackberries

This book offers an insightful account of Arab popular culture through the lens of about four hundred annotated Jordanian proverbs. The collection touches on almost every aspect of daily life (including animals, kinship, religion, weather, generosity, money, food, and love). The proverbs cover a wide spectrum of morals related to competence, appearance, ignorance, naivety, corruption, wisdom, experience, courage, and kindness, among many others. Specialized readers, including linguists, translators, anthropologists, psychologists, diplomats, and military persons, among others, will find significant material and insights relevant to their work in this book. It serves to provide the reader with a better, deeper understanding of Jordanian/Arab mentality and behaviour, which will encourage intercultural communication and help remove several socially-biased stereotypes, in addition to enriching the culture of proverbs in human language.


Mohammed Farghal is the author of several books including Advanced Issues in Arabic-English Translation Studies (2012) and Contextualizing Translation Theories: Aspects of Arabic-English Interlingual Communication (2015). He has published several articles in international, peer-reviewed journals, including Journal of Pragmatics, Anthropological Linguistics, Multilingua, IRAL, Babel, Target, Perspectives, and Meta. In addition, he has translated many works between English and Arabic, including The Road (Cormac McCarthy, 2006), Maps (Nuruddin Farah, 1986), and The True Deceiver (Tove Jansson, 1982).

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ISBN: 1-5275-3080-9

ISBN13: 978-1-5275-3080-5

Release Date: 1st April 2019

Pages: 148

Price: £58.99

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