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The Oxford Handbook of Modern Egyptian History (Oxford Handbooks)

The Oxford Handbook of Modern Egyptian History (Oxford Handbooks)

Current price: $213.60
Publication Date: March 1st, 2024
Publisher:
Oxford University Press, USA
ISBN:
9780190072742
Pages:
600
Usually Ships in 1 to 5 Days

Description

Until relatively recently, scholars of Egyptian history understood the modern period to begin with the movement of European people and ideas to Egypt's northern shores precipitated by Napoleon's invasion in 1798. From this perspective, modern Egyptian history was animated by the diverse and sometimes-contradictory ways in which Egyptians responded over time to colonial power and modern forms of knowledge. This handbook, featuring 26 originally commissioned essays by top scholars in the field, adds to a growing literature that complicates the facile colonizer-colonized and modern-tradition binaries undergirding this view.

Modern Egyptian history is a continuous process of translation and adaptation, invention and reinvention. Bringing together a dynamic and accomplished group of historians of Egypt, the book maps the present state of modern Egyptian history, highlighting the most promising avenues of research, and laying new ground upon which future generations of scholars may build. The contributors address both long-persisting themes in the field, though in new ways, as well as new themes reshaping how we understand modern Egyptian history, and thus Middle Eastern and global history. These include environment, family, infrastructure, intellectuals, labor, law, literature, medicine, politics, popular culture, and slavery. Within these categories, they explore issues of gender, race, and class. The questions these scholars consider reflect pressing contemporary concerns and debates, including medical sovereignty and bodily autonomy; the management of the environment; the rights and movements of workers; courts and legal struggles; cultural expression, production, and reception; and the relationship between the army, state, and society.

About the Author

Beth Baron is Distinguished Professor of History at the City College and Graduate Center, City University of New York. As a historian of the Middle East, she focuses on gender, medicine, and modern Egypt. She served as editor of the International Journal of Middle East Studies and as president of the Middle East Studies Association of North America. Her research has been funded by grants from the American Council of Learned Societies, the Carnegie Corporation, Fulbright-Hays, and the National Endowment for the Humanities. Jeffrey Culang is a historian of law, religion, and environmental politics in modern Egypt and the Middle East. He earned his PhD in history from the Graduate Center, City University of New York and was a postdoctoral fellow at the University of Texas at Austin and the Leibniz-Zentrum Moderner Orient in Berlin. He also served as Managing Editor of the International Journal of Middle East Studies. Independent of his work in history and Middle East studies, he is currently a senior editor at the Center on Global Energy Policy, Columbia University SIPA.