Description

Book Synopsis
A "New Woman" was announced in Egypt at the turn of the nineteenth century. With a new genre of prescriptive literature, new products, a new education, and a physically changed home, she increasingly emerged in public life.

Trade Review

"Mona Russell makes a significant contribution to our understanding of the complex ways modernization affected changes in the status and behavior of urban women in nineteenth- and early-twentieth-century Egypt. She demonstrates with mounds of archival evidence that the critical forces shaping the New Woman were consumerism and education. Her nuanced examination of the impact of textbooks on women's education is especially original and enlightening. One crucial theme that Russell weaves throughout her book is the way new and old ideas and institutions persisted side by side for as long as they did, sometimes harmoniously but often not. Whether she belonged to the upper class or the middle class, the New Woman found herself locked into class that was caught in-between the new and the old. I highly recommend Creating the New Egyptian Woman. It is a fresh take on the important subject of what it means to be 'modern' in the Middle East." - Philip S. Khoury, Professor of History and Dean of Humanities, Arts, and Social Sciences, Massachusetts Institute of Technology

"Mona Russell's innovative research lifts Egypt's new woman out of the pages of turn-of-the-century discourseabout nationalism and modernity, and intoa body of historiography that chronicles the activities of "modern," elite nationalists. Creating the New Egyptian Woman challenges the notion that transformations in women's roles - in response to changes in the world economy, Egyptian state-building, and British colonialism - were either wholly positive or detrimental. Indeed, Russell skillfully illustrates the double bind that was turn-of-the twentieth-century Egyptian modernity: through education and consumerism middle- and upper-class women were both liberated from their homes and further bound to them." - Lisa Pollard, Associate Professor of History, UNC-Wilmington Author of Nurturing the Nation: The Family Politics of Modernizing, Colonizing and Liberating Egypt



Table of Contents
Acknowledgements * Note on transliteration and translation * Introduction * Part One: The Household, Consumerism, and the New Woman * The House, City, and Nation that Ismail Built * Patterns of Urban Consumption and Development, 1879-1922 * Advertising and Consumer Culture in Egypt: Creating al-Sayyida al-Istihlakiyya * al-Sayyida al-Istihlakiyya and the New Woman * Part Two: Teaching the New Woman * Preface: "The Mother Is a School" * Education: Creating Mothers, Wives, Workers, Believers, and Citizens * The Discourse on Female Education * Textbooks: Defining Roles and Boundaries * Conclusion

Creating the New Egyptian Woman Consumerism Education and National Identity 18631922

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    A Paperback by M. Russell

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      View other formats and editions of Creating the New Egyptian Woman Consumerism Education and National Identity 18631922 by M. Russell

      Publisher: Palgrave MacMillan Us
      Publication Date: 10/1/2004 12:00:00 AM
      ISBN13: 9781349999651, 978-1349999651
      ISBN10: 1349999652

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      A "New Woman" was announced in Egypt at the turn of the nineteenth century. With a new genre of prescriptive literature, new products, a new education, and a physically changed home, she increasingly emerged in public life.

      Trade Review

      "Mona Russell makes a significant contribution to our understanding of the complex ways modernization affected changes in the status and behavior of urban women in nineteenth- and early-twentieth-century Egypt. She demonstrates with mounds of archival evidence that the critical forces shaping the New Woman were consumerism and education. Her nuanced examination of the impact of textbooks on women's education is especially original and enlightening. One crucial theme that Russell weaves throughout her book is the way new and old ideas and institutions persisted side by side for as long as they did, sometimes harmoniously but often not. Whether she belonged to the upper class or the middle class, the New Woman found herself locked into class that was caught in-between the new and the old. I highly recommend Creating the New Egyptian Woman. It is a fresh take on the important subject of what it means to be 'modern' in the Middle East." - Philip S. Khoury, Professor of History and Dean of Humanities, Arts, and Social Sciences, Massachusetts Institute of Technology

      "Mona Russell's innovative research lifts Egypt's new woman out of the pages of turn-of-the-century discourseabout nationalism and modernity, and intoa body of historiography that chronicles the activities of "modern," elite nationalists. Creating the New Egyptian Woman challenges the notion that transformations in women's roles - in response to changes in the world economy, Egyptian state-building, and British colonialism - were either wholly positive or detrimental. Indeed, Russell skillfully illustrates the double bind that was turn-of-the twentieth-century Egyptian modernity: through education and consumerism middle- and upper-class women were both liberated from their homes and further bound to them." - Lisa Pollard, Associate Professor of History, UNC-Wilmington Author of Nurturing the Nation: The Family Politics of Modernizing, Colonizing and Liberating Egypt



      Table of Contents
      Acknowledgements * Note on transliteration and translation * Introduction * Part One: The Household, Consumerism, and the New Woman * The House, City, and Nation that Ismail Built * Patterns of Urban Consumption and Development, 1879-1922 * Advertising and Consumer Culture in Egypt: Creating al-Sayyida al-Istihlakiyya * al-Sayyida al-Istihlakiyya and the New Woman * Part Two: Teaching the New Woman * Preface: "The Mother Is a School" * Education: Creating Mothers, Wives, Workers, Believers, and Citizens * The Discourse on Female Education * Textbooks: Defining Roles and Boundaries * Conclusion

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