Press in the Middle East and North Africa, 1850-1950
Politics, Social History and Culture
Inbunden, Engelska, 2017
Av Anthony Gorman, Didier Monciaud, Anthony Gorman, Didier Monciaud
1 579 kr
Produktinformation
- Utgivningsdatum2017-12-15
- Mått156 x 234 x 31 mm
- Vikt732 g
- FormatInbunden
- SpråkEngelska
- Antal sidor392
- FörlagEdinburgh University Press
- ISBN9781474430616
Tillhör följande kategorier
Anthony Gorman is Senior Lecturer in Islamic and Middle Eastern Studies at the University of Edinburgh. He has taught at universities in Australia, Egypt and Britain. Among his research interests are modern Egyptian historiography and the resident foreign presence in modern Egypt. He is currently co-editing a book on the press in the Middle East and on a monograph on a history of the prison in the Middle East. Didier Monciaud is an Independent Researcher affiliated with the GREMAMO (University Paris VII Denis Diderot) and a board member of the Cahiers d’histoire, revue d’histoire critique. His main research interests are political commitments, trajectories and mobilisations in contemporary Egypt, particularly among the educated youth.
- Introduction: Anthony Gorman and Didier MonciaudI. The Press as National VoiceNews Publishing as a Reflection of Public Opinion: The Idea of News during the Ottoman Financial Crises, Gül Karagöz KızılcaDisruptions of the Local, Eruptions of the Feminine: Local Reportage and National Anxieties in Egypt’s 1890s, Marilyn BoothThe Arabic Palestinian Press between the Two World Wars, Mustafa KabhaFalastin: An Experiment in Promoting Palestinian Nationalism through the English-Language Press, Fred LawsonII. The Rise of the Journalist Press Propaganda and Subaltern Agents of Pan-Islamic Networks in the Muslim Mediterranean World prior to World War I, Odile MoreauThe Publicist and his Newspaper in Syria in the Era of the Young Turk Revolution, between Reformist Commitment and Political Pressures: Muhammad Kurd ‘Ali and al-Muqtabas (1908-1917), Kais EzzerelliFrom Intellectual to Professional: the Move from ‘Contributor’ to ‘Journalist’ at Ruz al-Yusuf in the 1920s and 1930s, Sonia TemimiIII: Critical, Dissident VoicesThe Anarchist Press in Egypt before the First World War, Anthony GormanThe War in Ethiopia in the Italian Fascist and anti-Fascist Press in Tunisia in the 1930s, Leila El HoussiA Voice from Below in the 1940s Egyptian Press: the Experience of the Workers Newspaper Shubra, Didier MonciaudIV: The Press as Community VoiceThe Lamp, Qasim Amin, Jewish Women, and Baghdadi Men – A Reading in the Jewish Iraqi Journal al-Misbah, Orit BashkinFrom a Privileged Community to a Minority Community: The Orthodox Community of Beirut through the Newspaper al-Hadiyya, Souad Slim