Available Formats
Cultural Entanglement in the Pre-Independence Arab World: Arts, Thought and Literature
By (Author) Anthony Gorman
Edited by Sarah Irving
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
I.B. Tauris
19th May 2022
United Kingdom
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Social and cultural history
Colonialism and imperialism
306.09174927
Paperback
280
Width 156mm, Height 234mm
This book examines the ways in which non-Arabic cultural influences interacted with the rich, complex and sometimes conflictual environment of the Arab world in the pre-independence era. It comprises a series of 11 detailed case studies, including topics such as the songs of Egyptian forced labourers in the British Army in World War I, the translation and commentary of an Ottoman text in interwar Palestine, and the contested use of French in the Algerian independence movement, that highlight the complex interplay of colonial pressures, traditional and novel art forms, local and international practices, notions of identity and belonging. The book demonstrates how the interaction between Arabic and non-Arabic cultural and intellectual production as well as influences from imperial Europe and the Islamic East, have in various times and spaces inspired creative tensions which challenge binary views of East-West relations and the standard imperialist-colonial frameworks. In this sense the volume seeks to offer a critique of both established modernising conceptions of cultural development and nationalist, nativist frameworks based on the values of a specific political project.
ANTHONY GORMAN is Senior Lecturer in Islamic and Middle Eastern Studies at the University of Edinburgh, UK. Author of Historians, State and Politics in Twentieth Century Egypt (2003) he has more recently coedited and contributed to volumes on late nineteenth-century Egypt, Middle Eastern diasporas and the press in the Middle East before 1950. SARAH IRVING is Leverhulme Early Career Fellow at Edge Hill University, UK, researching a social history of the 1927 earthquake in Palestine. She is also Visiting Research Fellow with the Crossroads project on Middle Eastern Christians at Leiden University, The Netherlands, and editor of the journal Contemporary Levant. She earned her PhD from the University of Edinburgh, UK.