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London Review of Books

Bonds of Indebtedness subscriber-only content

Lawrence Rosen

  • On the Road to Kandahar: Travels through Conflict in the Islamic World by Jason Burke

The death toll in Iraq continues to rise: more than 2600 American soldiers, 113 British troops, 130 from other countries, perhaps 40,000 Iraqi civilians. And more than 70 journalists, outnumbering the 69 killed in World War Two, the 63 in Vietnam and the 17 in Korea. The risks involved mean that it is hard to ask whether journalists do a good enough job in telling us what we need to know. Stories are not driven by content alone, but by the way in which they are formulated and presented, often without the storyteller or audience being fully aware of the process. The result may be that the narrative diverts attention from the substance of what we are being told: we need to be careful not to confuse the forms of verisimilitude with the insights we are apparently being given.

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Lawrence Rosen teaches anthropology at Princeton and law at Columbia Law School. A Carnegie Scholar, he is the author of The Culture of Islam and Law as Culture: An Invitation.