Books Fleming's first book, ''The Muslim Bonaparte: Diplomacy & Orientalism in Ali Pasha's Greece'' (Princeton, 1999), is a standard of doctoral reading lists in cultural history and the history of southeastern Europe, and has been translated into Albanian, Greek, Italian, and Turkish. The Greek edition was widely reviewed and covered in the popular press. Fleming's second book,
Greece: A Jewish History (Princeton, 2008), received numerous awards: a
National Jewish Book Award;
the Runciman Award; the Prix Alberto Benveniste; and honorable mention, Keeley Book Prize of the
Modern Greek Studies Association and received considerable popular press in Greece. It has been translated into
Greek and
French. In the English-speaking academy the book has been widely and largely positively reviewed, though some reviewers have objected to its "
anti-Zionist" and "diasporist" approach, which minimizes and to an extent rejects the centrality of
Israel and of
Zionism. Fleming is
co-editor, with Adnan Husain, of
A Faithful Sea: The Religious Cultures of the Mediterranean 1200–1700 (Oxford OneWorld, 2007).
Other publications Fleming has authored numerous articles, chapters, and encyclopedia entries, of which the most cited is "Orientalism, the Balkans, and Balkan Historiography", published in the
American Historical Review in 2000. In 2009, the journal
Nationalities Papers printed an apology and retraction after it published an article that made extensive use of Fleming's work without citation or reference (Alice Curticapean, "Are you Hungarian or Romanian?" in
Nationalities Papers, Volume 35, No. 3, pp. 411–427; retraction printed Volume 37, No. 4). Fleming is a prolific book reviewer, and has published over one hundred reviews in both academic and popular publications. ==Family==