"The volume reconceptualizes the history and movements of translation, beginning with the Middle East and the Arabic language, thus moving beyond a Western-centric and Anglo normative research perspective. Apart from translation studies, it will no doubt be useful for scholars working in discourse analysis, history, sociology, politics, and other related subjects."-África Vidal Claramonte, Professor in Translation Studies, The University of Salamanca"In its urgent call for re-entering the Arab-Islamic world epistemologically and methodologically, this book is a signal contribution to translation studies in the Arab world, poised to broaden the philosophical scope of its theorizing and to deepen its historical reach."-Waïl S. Hassan, University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign"This fascinating series of theoretical interventions and richly informed case studies is a major re-mapping of the discipline of Translation Studies. Bringing together leading critics and theorists from Eurocentric and Arabic traditions, the volume underscores how foundational Arabic translation is to Western humanism and world culture generally."Michael Syrotinski, Marshall Professor of French and Comparative Literature, Director, Centre for Comparative Literature and Translation, University of Glasgow