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Modern Trends in Egyptian Historiography: A Review Article

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  29 January 2009

Peter Gran
Affiliation:
University of Texas at Austin

Extract

The graduate history program of ‘Ayn Shams University has produced some of the finest scholarly studies in the field of Egyptian history in recent years. The program has been particularly receptive to the shift toward a social and economic approach within the discipline of history. It is noteworthy that for a number of years this program has been directed by two historians who were not themselves trained in this specialization. Dr. Ahmad ‘Izzat ‘Abd al-Karīm (the founder of the program) is an institutional historian, and Dr. ‘Abd al-Raḥlm Muṣṭafa (the current chairman) is a political historian

Type
Review Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1978

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References

Author's Note. I would like to thank Afaf Marsot, Rifaat Abou el-Hajj, and Judith Gran for their help.

1 For a general overview, see Afaf, Lutfi al-Sayyid Marsot, ‘Egyptian Historical Research and Writing on Egypt in the Twentieth Century,’ MESA Bulletin, 7, 2 (1973), 115;Google ScholarJack, Crabbs Jr, ‘Politics, History, and Culture in Nasser's Egypt,’ International Journal of Middle East Studies, 6, 4 (1975), 386420.Google Scholar

2 Cairo, n.d.

3 With Professor Rajab, Harrāz (Cairo, 1965).Google Scholar

4 Anīs, , Hadārat, p. 164.Google Scholar

5 Tatawwur al-Haraka al-wataniyya fī Misr min sanat 1918 ilā sanat 1936 (Cairo, 1968).Google Scholar

6 Capitalisme et sociétés anonymes en Egypte (Paris: Librarie Général du Droit et de Jurisprudence, 1970).Google Scholar

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8 Ibid., pp. 141, 143, 162–163, 167, 169, and passim.

9 Erskine, Childers, The Road to Suez (London: MacGibbon & Kee, 1962).Google Scholar

10 Rā'ūf, 'Abbās Hāmid, al-Nizām al-Ijtimā'i fi Misr fī zi11 al-milkiyyāt al-zirā'iyya al-kābīra, 1837–1914 (Cairo, 1973);Google Scholar'Āsim, al-Disūqī, Kibār mullāk al-arādī al-zira'iyya wa dawruhum fī'l mujtama' al-misrī, 1914–1952 (Cairo, 1975). 'Alī Barakāt's work on the land system from the nineteenth century to 1914 is in press.Google Scholar

11 It should be noted that the land registers in the archives of the Ministry of Treasury are organized not according to the name of the landholder but by each town or village in which he had holdings. This greatly extends the amount of time and energy required for such a study.

12 Al-Disūqī, , Kibar mullak, p. 44.Google Scholar

13 Ibid.., pp. 39, 44, 61, 324.

14 Al-Disūqī, , Kibar mullak, pp. 9497, 324 ff.Google Scholar

15 Hāmid, , al-Nizām al-Ijtimā'i, pp. 2426, 189.Google Scholar

16 Ibid.., p. 7.

17 'Abd, al-RaHīm'Abd, al-RaHman 'Abd al-RaHīm, al-Rīf al-misrī fī qarn al-thāmin 'ashar (Cairo, 1974), presents in his study of the peasantry the most extreme expression of pessimism of any of the works of the period. His focus on Mamlūk oppression leaves no room for the possibility that peasant and Bedouin struggles may have contributed to bringing down Ottoman rule.Google Scholar

18 Hāmid, , al-Nizām al-Ijtimā'i, pp. 83, 278, 111.Google Scholar

19 'Abd, al-Khāliq Lāshīn, Sa'd Zaghlūl wa dawruhu fī'l-siyāsa al-misriyya Hattā sanat 1914 (Cairo, 1970).Google Scholar