Book Reviews Reel Bad Arabs: How Hollywood Vilifies a People Jack Shaheen New York: Olive Branch Press, 2001. 574 pages. 139 When it comes to Arab characters in movies, Hollywood has only one kind: Bad Arabs. So argues Jack Shaheen, professor emeritus of mass communica­ tions at Southern Illinois University and a fonner CBS News consultant on Middle East affairs in his new book,Reel Bad Arabs: How Hollywood Vilifies a People. In this groundbreaking study, Shaheen provides long-awaited evidence that since "cameras started cranking to the present," Hollywood, for more than a century, has targeted Arabs. It has portrayed them, knowingly or unknowingly, as "uncivilized religious fanatics and money-mad cultural ·others'." He convincingly makes the case that filmmakers must not be par­ doned for distorting and sacrificing the truth under the false pretext of artis­ tic license. The book is divided into two main parts. Most important, perhaps, is the introduction. The second part reviews films from A to Z. The book contains notes, appendices, a glossary, an index of films, and lists and discusses, in alphabetical order, more than 900 feature films containing Arab characters. The overwhelming majority of them, such as Prisoner in the Middle East, Wanted Dead or Alive, The Delta Force, and EYecutive Decision negatively stereotype Arabs. Only a handful of scenarios that surfaced in the 1980s and 1990s featured Arab characters as heroes. The Lion of the Desert and The 13"' Warrior come to mind. Shaheen eloquently describes the links between the ability to create fic­ tional narratives and images and the power to fonn social attitudes, shape thoughts and beliefs, and construct prisms through which people view the world, themselves, and other peoples. Over time and through repetition, these stereotypes become self-perpetuating, enduring, and hard to eliminate. Part One consists of 12 sections, which enables the reader to navigate easily what otherwise could have been complicated issues and concepts. The first section, "The Genesis," discusses the negative stereotyping of Arabs in American pop culture. After this, he introduces "Real Arabs" as he has known them: his family, friends and colleagues, and people he has met and experienced throughout his life. Another part, "The Stereotype's Entry," deals with how stereotypical Arab images entered American pop­ ular culture. Here he argues that American image-makers did not invent 142 The American Journal of [slamic Social Sciences 19:4 social transformation that takes all of these factors into account, not just educating filmmakers or tackling any one factor alone. Nevertheless, this important, pioneering, and creative study should open the door to completely new modes of activism for the Arab and Muslim communities. It is my hope that they will be propelled to upgrade their understanding and responses to this phenomenon, and begin the tedious work of organizing to eradicate it. The sure approach to ending Hollywood's injurious practice of dehu­ manizing Arabs and reducing them to mere caricatures is a comprehensive approach. Hollywood should not be targeted alone for education and dia­ logue - the whole society should be targeted. Moreover, education alone cannot resolve the problem. It should be used as a tool to augment our involvement, as Arabs, in all aspects of America's social, economical, sci­ entific, and cultural life as producers and not as mere consumers. Reel Bad Arabs should make its way into university and college class­ rooms to help raise an enlightened new generation of filmmakers who will explore and present the lives of people in ways that are not distorted to serve an ulterior agenda. This will make it easier for Arabs to produce and shape our own image as we know it. This process would then give rise to story-telling and image-making that broadens horizons, promotes under­ standing, and creates harmony within cultural diversity. Michel Shehadeh ADC West Coast Director Stanton, California