- Florence of Arabia
Infobox_Book
name = Florence of Arabia
title_orig =
translator =
image_caption = Paperback cover
author =Christopher Buckley
cover_artist =
country =United States
language = English
series =
genre = Satirical novel
publisher =Random House
release_date = 2004
media_type = Print (Hardback &Paperback )
pages = 253 pp
isbn = ISBN 1400062233
preceded_by =
followed_by ="Florence of Arabia" is a satirical
novel written byChristopher Buckley and first published in 2004 byRandom House . The novel follows a fictional State Department employee, Florence Farfaletti, as she attempts to bringequal rights to theMiddle East ern nation of "Matar."Plot summary
The wife of the ambassador of the fictional Middle Eastern nation of Wasabia gets drunk, steals her husband's car and drives out of the compound. When pulled over by police, she desperately phones her friend Florence Farfaletti, the "Deputy to the Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for Near Eastern Affairs," begging for asylum to avoid a harsh punishment. Florence is unable to arrange asylum.
The wife is taken back to Wasabia and beheaded for her crime. In anger over her friend's loss, Florence drafts a proposal to introduce a women's television network in the relatively liberal Matar. The state department rejects the proposal, and reassigns Florence to an obscure posting outside the country. To Florence's surprise, a mysterious government employee, identified only as "Uncle Sam," representing an unknown agency, notifies Florence that her proposal has been accepted and agrees to fund the mission.
Florence arrives in Matar and creates a women's television network that is broadcast into neighboring Wasabia. The network airs shows like "One Thousand and One Mornings," which feature empowered female characters who nettle their oppressors and make fun of men. The programming is effective, eventually causing the women of Matar to stage an uprising.
Florence is thrown in jail, but ultimately is rescued and returns to the United States. Back in the United States, Florence discovers that her operation was not funded by the U.S. government at all, but rather by the Waldorf Group, a private-equity firm which wanted to prevent extremism in Wasabia to help secure the flow of profits.
Florence is exasperated to have been working for bankers all along, but glad that her work improved the status of women's rights in Wasabia. An ex-president, who is on the board of the Waldorf Group, tells her, "One way or the other, Florence, we're all working for investment bankers."
Objects of satire
The novel is set in the fictional state of Matar (pronounced Mutter), a somewhat liberal Middle Eastern sheikdom, similar to the real world
Qatar (pronounced Cutter).Cite news | title = No great sheiks | work =The Los Angeles Times | author =Shashi Tharoor | date = 2004-10-24] The neighboring country Wasabia refers toSaudi Arabia , with Wasabia being a play onWahhabism , one of the most conservative forms ofIslam , which is criticized throughout the book for its treatment of women."
The Washington Post " reviewer wrote, tongue in cheek, of the fictional country of Wasabia : "Its oppressive power is guaranteed by optimum connections to the American establishment greased by a suave prince as its longtime ambassador in Washington. Wasabia's medieval legal system, among other things, subjugates, humiliates and violates women, as well as executing them for such vices as flirting. Of course this is a wholly fictional land, too absurd to resemble any in the real family of nations." [Cite news | url = http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A45734-2004Sep23.html | title = Desert Storm | author = Charles Trueheart | work =The Washington Post | date = 2004-09-26| accessdate = 2007-05-13]A
private equity firm in the book that seeks to profit from political turmoil and political connections, the Waldorf Group, is a reference to theCarlyle Group .The novel was among the first to lampoon
terrorism and Islamist extremism, which were not considered laughing matters. The book also portraysU.S. Foreign Policy as a contributor to making the Middle East worse. [Cite news | url = http://query.nytimes.com/gst/abstract.html?res=FA0E16F73B5D0C778EDDA00894DC404482&fta=y&archive:article_related | title = Laughing Instead of Screaming | author = Caryn James | date = 2004-09-24 | work =The New York Times ]Publication
The story was first published in two long excerpts in the September and October issues of "
The Atlantic Monthly ". The book was published in hardcover onSeptember 14 ,2004 .The title of the novel is a play on "
Lawrence of Arabia ". "Lawrence of Arabia", whose real name wasT. E. Lawrence , was a British soldier who became famous for his exploits in the Middle East, particularly as a liaison during theArab Revolt of 1916-1918. Buckley finished writing the novel onMay 19 ,2004 , the anniversary of T. E. Lawrence's death. [Florence of Arabia, p. 253.] The name "Florence of Arabia" was first suggested byNoel Coward who told the actorPeter O'Toole (who played Lawrence in the film "Lawrence of Arabia") that "If you'd been any prettier, it would have been "Florence of Arabia"."The novel is an
homage toFern Holland , whom Buckley describes as a "real-life "Florence of Arabia"." Holland was a 33-year-old lawyer who went to work for theCoalition Provisional Authority inIraq . OnMarch 9, 2004 , Holland was murdered for her work involvingwomen's rights .Cite news | url = http://www.nytimes.com/2004/09/10/books/10CROW.html?ex=1252555200&en=29143d744708b4f8&ei=5090&partner=rssuserland | title = Yesterday's Shocker Is Today's Must Read | author =Janet Maslin | date = 2004-09-10 | work =The New York Times | accessdate = 2007-05-13] Along with Robert J. Zangas, another U.S. aid worker, and Salwa Oumashi, she was the first civilian working for the occupation authority to be killed.Footnotes
External links
* [http://www.theatlantic.com/doc/prem/200409/buckley First installment] in
The Atlantic Monthly .
* [http://www.theatlantic.com/doc/prem/200410/buckley Second installment] inThe Atlantic Monthly .
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