Publication

1996 - Cambridge University Press, Cambridge [England], England

Language

English

Word Count

68,750 words, Guess

Page Count

275 pages

Identifiers

and 2 more
  • Goodreads3963042
  • LibraryThing1751540

Classifications

  • DDC962/.03
  • LCCDT107.826 .A76 1996

Description

This path-breaking study of Egyptian popular culture provides fresh and vital insights into the long struggle of modern Egypt to define its identity. Dr. Armbrust examines Egyptian television, recorded music, the press, and the cinema. These popular media have broken radically with cultural icons of Egypt's past, while offering ordinary people a way of coming to terms with the clashing values of nationalism, modernity, and Arab classicism. However, since the 1970s, popular culture has also become a site of contestation. The delicate balance between conservative nationalist imagery and a modernist ethic has been increasingly put in question by producers and consumers of the media, reflecting a sense that the representations of modernity do not reflect the experience of Egyptians.

Subjects

Topics

HistoryMass mediaCivilizationPopular cultureEgypt, civilizationEgypt, social conditionsPopular culture -- Egypt.

Places

Series Statement

  • Cambridge studies in social and cultural anthropology ;

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