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Sheikhs Batmobile
 
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Sheikhs Batmobile (Paperback)

by Richard Poplak (Author)
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
List Price: CDN$ 24.00
Price: CDN$ 17.52 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping on orders over CDN$ 39. Details
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Sheikhs Batmobile + Ja No Man
Price For Both: CDN$ 30.66

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Product Description

Quill & Quire

Contemporary cultural criticism and immersive journalism often take the form of a road trip, albeit to places a little off the tourist track. In The Sheikh’s Batmobile, author Richard Poplak scores some heavy frequent-flier miles visiting a series of countries that fall under the vast umbrella of “the Muslim world.” The result is an entertaining travelogue that observes the significant impact American popular culture has had on foreign cultural scenes.   Poplak’s itinerary is impressive. He goes bowling in Kazakhstan (and, incidentally, finds out what the kids really think of Borat); listens to metal in Cairo, punk in Indonesia, and hip-hop in Palestine; watches The Simpsons in Dubai; plays video games in Syria; and even tries some bruising backyard wrestling in Afghanistan. The writing is colourful and punchy, giving plenty of scope for Poplak to display his talent for dramatic, on-the-spot reportage. He often has occasion, for example, to describe how loud music feels: the bass that “nestled in my gut like a fat slug, writhing, looking for an exit of its own,” the concert hall that “heaved forward in a single movement, like a gag reflex before puking.”  Where the book has limits is in describing the big picture. Given the range of activity Poplak investigates, as well as the evident diversity – economic, religious, political, geographic – of the Muslim countries he visits, this isn’t surprising. It’s hard to generalize from such a wide-ranging collection of data. Any connections between the chapters hang by very thin threads. One relative constant derives from the fact that pop culture is largely youth culture, and this is mainly the world Poplak explores. But even this tells us something about the places he visits, as most of them have young populations. And since Poplak is of the same general cohort, and a fan of much of what he hears and sees – though admitting to some feelings of ambivalence and occasional reservations over things like the link between metal music and terror – he relates well with all of the people he meets.  Another guiding principle is Poplak’s abiding optimism. He sees American pop culture, despite being undeniably trashy most of the time, as playing a beneficent role, building a cultural wall against Islamic radicalism and fundamentalism while forging relationships with the wider world. He only briefly mentions critiques of the American entertainment-industrial complex and concerns over global cultural homogenization, and has little time for those who believe that the agenda behind American “soft power” is political as well as commercial. Though some promising opportunities for criticism are passed by, overall this is an excellent informal tour of a complex and rapidly evolving cultural terrain.


Review

"A heroic feat of research, analysis, and on-the-ground reportage. ... It's a weird, wonderful world where ... pop is revered and high and low culture freely mingle. ... The Sheikh's Batmobile should shatter the Western stereotype of the Muslim world as repressive and stagnant."

--Jason McBride, Quill & Quire

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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Clever, funny, and thoughtful, Jun 18 2009
By Daniel A. Watts (Toronto, ON Canada) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
Another fun and thought-provoking book by Richard Poplak. Like his first, Ja No Man, this one is full of sardonic humour and clever insights gained from first-hand experience.

I found The Sheikh's Batmobile to be quite cerebral, but the prose is kept fresh and interesting by frequent changes in locale and subject matter.

Pop culture isn't one of the freedoms that we in the West most cherish. We take it for granted, especially as adults. It is surprisingly touching, then, to read about how hard young people in some Muslim countries must struggle to keep alive the flame of rock music, comics, movies and the other staples of our adolescence.
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5.0 out of 5 stars There are two great equalizers - death and popular culture, Jul 12 2009
This is a fantastic book - I can't put it down (at the last chapter)!! It's been a while since i read a book that was both compelling, fascinating, informative and entertaining. Richard opens the door to his car, takes you in for a ride across the desert, shows you things and people you thought only existed in David Lynch films, and like Dirty Harry, rolls out from underneath gunfire, grabs the goods and struts away without a scratch. A wild ride indeed!

Have you always wondered where our pop culture goes when it dies on this side of the planet? It gets flung across the continents, and filtered into the lives of Muslims, Sheiks, terrorists and everyday Arabs living in the middle east. Each chapter is a new adventure, and each adventure, a new window onto another world so much like ours, yet so different as well.

A fluid and engaging read - get it. You won't be disappointed!

And you will never see Lionel Ritchie in the same light ever again...
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