Dramas of Nationhood
Title | Dramas of Nationhood PDF eBook |
Author | Lila Abu-Lughod |
Publisher | University of Chicago Press |
Pages | 338 |
Release | 2008-05-30 |
Genre | Social Science |
ISBN | 0226001989 |
How do people come to think of themselves as part of a nation? Dramas of Nationhood identifies a fantastic cultural form that binds together the Egyptian nation—television serials. These melodramatic programs—like soap operas but more closely tied to political and social issues than their Western counterparts—have been shown on television in Egypt for more than thirty years. In this book, Lila Abu-Lughod examines the shifting politics of these serials and the way their contents both reflect and seek to direct the changing course of Islam, gender relations, and everyday life in this Middle Eastern nation. Representing a decade's worth of research, Dramas of Nationhood makes a case for the importance of studying television to answer larger questions about culture, power, and modern self-fashionings. Abu-Lughod explores the elements of developmentalist ideology and the visions of national progress that once dominated Egyptian television—now experiencing a crisis. She discusses the broadcasts in rich detail, from the generic emotional qualities of TV serials and the depictions of authentic national culture, to the debates inflamed by their deliberate strategies for combating religious extremism.
Dramas of Nationhood
Title | Dramas of Nationhood PDF eBook |
Author | Lila Abu-Lughod |
Publisher | University of Chicago Press |
Pages | 352 |
Release | 2005 |
Genre | Performing Arts |
ISBN | 9780226001968 |
Television is the cultural form that binds together the nation of Egypt. This text analyses Egyptian TV, not only to provide an understanding of the effect of the medium on Egyptian people, but also to examine TVs greater role in culture.
Egypt's Culture Wars
Title | Egypt's Culture Wars PDF eBook |
Author | Samia Mehrez |
Publisher | Routledge |
Pages | 618 |
Release | 2008-04-01 |
Genre | Social Science |
ISBN | 1134109512 |
This ground-breaking work presents original research on cultural politics and battles in Egypt at the turn of the twenty first century. It deconstructs the boundaries between ‘high’ and ‘low’ culture drawing on conceptual tools in cultural studies, translation studies and gender studies to analyze debates in the fields of literature, cinema, mass media and the plastic arts. Anchored in the Egyptian historical and social contexts and inspired by the influential work of Pierre Bourdieu, it rigorously places these debates and battles within the larger framework of a set of questions about the relationship between the cultural and political fields in Egypt.
Visualizing Secularism and Religion
Title | Visualizing Secularism and Religion PDF eBook |
Author | Maha Yahya |
Publisher | University of Michigan Press |
Pages | 569 |
Release | 2012-05-22 |
Genre | Social Science |
ISBN | 0472028138 |
Over the past two decades secular polities across the globe have witnessed an increasing turn to religion-based political movements, such as the rise of political Islam and Hindu nationalism, which have been fueling new and alternative notions of nationhood and national ideologies. The rise of such movements has initiated widespread debates over the meaning, efficacy, and normative worth of secularism. Visualizing Secularism and Religion examines the constitutive role of religion in the formation of secular-national public spheres in the Middle East and South Asia, arguing that in order to establish secularism as the dominant national ideology of countries such as Turkey, Lebanon, and India, the discourses, practices, and institutions of secular nation-building include rather than exclude religion as a presence within the public sphere. The contributors examine three fields---urban space and architecture, media, and public rituals such as parades, processions, and commemorative festivals---with a view to exploring how the relation between secularism, religion, and nationalism is displayed and performed. This approach demands a reconceptualization of secularism as an array of contextually specific practices, ideologies, subjectivities, and "performances" rather than as simply an abstract legal bundle of rights and policies.
Title | PDF eBook |
Author | Samia Mehrez |
Publisher | American Univ in Cairo Press |
Pages | 354 |
Release | 2010-01-01 |
Genre | |
ISBN | 9789774163746 |
A look at some of the raging debates in the arts in Egypt
Media Worlds
Title | Media Worlds PDF eBook |
Author | Faye D. Ginsburg |
Publisher | Univ of California Press |
Pages | 432 |
Release | 2002-10-23 |
Genre | Social Science |
ISBN | 0520928164 |
This groundbreaking volume showcases the exciting work emerging from the ethnography of media, a burgeoning new area in anthropology that expands both social theory and ethnographic fieldwork to examine the way media—film, television, video—are used in societies around the globe, often in places that have been off the map of conventional media studies. The contributors, key figures in this new field, cover topics ranging from indigenous media projects around the world to the unexpected effects of state control of media to the local impact of film and television as they travel transnationally. Their essays, mostly new work produced for this volume, bring provocative new theoretical perspectives grounded in cross-cultural ethnographic realities to the study of media.
Dramas of the Past on the Twentieth-Century Stage
Title | Dramas of the Past on the Twentieth-Century Stage PDF eBook |
Author | Alexander Feldman |
Publisher | Routledge |
Pages | 272 |
Release | 2013-01-17 |
Genre | Performing Arts |
ISBN | 1136155007 |
This book defines and exemplifies a major genre of modern dramatic writing, termed historiographic metatheatre, in which self-reflexive engagements with the traditions and forms of dramatic art illuminate historical themes and aid in the representation of historical events and, in doing so, formulates a genre. Historiographic metatheatre has been, and remains, a seminal mode of political engagement and ideological critique in the contemporary dramatic canon. Locating its key texts within the traditions of historical drama, self-reflexivity in European theatre, debates in the politics and aesthetics of postmodernism, and currents in contemporary historiography, this book provides a new critical idiom for discussing the major works of the genre and others that utilize its techniques. Feldman studies landmarks in the theatre history of postwar Britain by Weiss, Stoppard, Brenton, Wertenbaker and others, focusing on European revolutionary politics, the historiography of the World Wars and the effects of British colonialism. The playwrights under consideration all use the device of the play-within-the-play to explore constructions of nationhood and of Britishness, in particular. Those plays performed within the framing works are produced in places of exile where, Feldman argues, the marginalized negotiate the terms of national identity through performance.