His books From Village to Suburb and Tribe and State in Bahrain are considered pioneering works in the field of Arab anthropology.[2] Khuri was widely considered as a prominent scholar on Arab sociology and politics.[3]
Biography
Khuri was born in 1935 as a Lebanese Christian.[4] He earned both his Bachelor's and Master's degree in anthropology at the American University of Beirut (AUB).[5] In 1964, Khuri completed his PhD in social anthropology at the University of Oregon, with his thesis being on the influence of men in Magburaka, Sierra Leone.[2][6] He later joined AUB as an instructor in the same year and was later promoted to assistant professor in 1965. Khuri became associate professor in 1971, placed on tenure in 1972, and then promoted to professor in 1978. As a professor, he served multiple terms as chairperson of the university's Department of Sociology and the Department of Social and Behavioral Sciences.[2]
In 1975, Khuri published From Village to Suburb: Order and Change in Greater Beirut, widely regarded as a pioneering case study of suburbs in the Middle East by an Arab anthropologist. In particular, his analysis of suburbs in relation to Middle Eastern classes of sect, family, and social class was well-received.[7][2] In 1980, he published Tribe and State in Bahrain, a detailed sociopolitical analysis of the Middle East's smallest country based on a year-long field trip undertaken by Khuri in 1974-75.[8] The book chronicles Bahrain's pre-modern history and proved controversial to the Bahraini government as the book was banned in the country despite high demand.[9]
Due to escalations in the Lebanese civil war in 1987, Khuri resigned as professor and relocated with his family to the town of Reading, England. From 1987 to 1992, he worked as the director of the Issam Fares Foundation on behalf of his Lebanese friend and businessman, Issam Fares. After 1992, he began to solely concentrate on academia. Over the course of his career, Khuri authored 17 books and 40 articles on Arab culture.[2]
Personal life
Fuad Khuri was married to Sonia Jalbout Khuri, an AUB graduate of mathematics who taught the field in both Lebanon and the UK. She also worked as Fuad's research assistant and editor to his books.[1] In his later years while stricken with illness, Sonia would accompany Fuad on his field trips and scribe his notes. Khuri died on 4 May 2003 at the age of 68 and was survived by his wife and two children.[2][10]
Bibliography
Khuri, Fuad (1 May 1975). From village to suburb : order and change in greater Beirut. University of Chicago Press. ISBN9780226434711.
Khuri, Fuad (1980). Tribe and state in Bahrain : the transformation of social and political authority in an Arab state. University of Chicago Press. ISBN0226434737.
Khuri, Fuad (1982). Leadership and Development in Arab Society. Syracuse University Press. ISBN9780815660606.
^Bonine, Michael E. (9 March 2016). "Fuad I. Khuri. Tribe and State in Bahrain: The Transformation of Social and Political Authority in an Arab State. Chicago: The University of Chicago Press, 1980. xiii + 289 pages. $16.00". Middle East Studies Association Bulletin. 16 (2): 67–68. doi:10.1017/S0026318400012025. S2CID164554616.