Upper Egypt: Identity and ChangeNicholas S. Hopkins, Reem Saad American Univ in Cairo Press, 2004 - 289 من الصفحات Upper Egypt (the Sa'id) is often portrayed as a source of disruption and unpredictability in the broader Egyptian system. Upper Egypt: Identity and Change corrects that image by laying out the order in the meaningful life of Upper Egyptians. That order is based on a strong sense of regional identity including also religious and family identity, and on the political, economic, religious, and family structures that provide the context for action by the people of this region. This timely collection of 14 contributions by anthropologists, historians, and others deals with such issues as the implications of a Sa'idi identity, the relationship between religion and society, the expanding universe from family to community to region and beyond to the world, and the place of villages, regions, and tribes in the regional structure. All of this is put within a context of change due to the effect of capitalism, the pressure from a national bureaucracy and elite, and the evolving notions of religious and regional identity. The book is aimed at scholars of social dynamics in the Middle East, including specialists in development, and at all those who are looking for a fresh approach to this marginalized area. Contributors: Mohammed Abdel Aal, El-Sayed el-Aswad, Kirsten Bach, Rachida Chih, Patrick Gaffney, Sandrine Gamblin, Peter Gran, Nicholas Hopkins, Hans-Christian Korsholm Nielsen, Catherine Miller, Reem Saad, Mark Sedgwick, Hania Sholkamy. |
المحتوى
Social Organization | 12 |
A Southern Question? | 79 |
The Role and Impact of Sufi Links | 97 |
Patrick Gaffney | 111 |
The Rifaiyya in Musha | 141 |
The Khalwatiyya Brotherhood in Rural Upper Egypt and in Cairo | 157 |
Changing Family and Marriage Patterns in an Aswan Village | 169 |
Tribal Identity and Politics in Aswan Governorate | 213 |
Development and Change | 233 |
Law 961992 in Qena and Aswan | 251 |
A Tale of Two Cities | 267 |
| 285 | |
عبارات ومصطلحات مألوفة
Ababda agricultural Ahmad al-Azhar al-Idrisi al-Tahtawi American University Arab areas Aswan Asyut Bedouin Biltagy brothers bureaucratic Cairo Cairo Press century cultural Delta dhikr discourse dominant Dongola economic Egyptian migrants elite factors Girga girls global governorate Hijaz Hopkins Ibn Idris Idfu Idrisi Imbaba important Islamic Khatmiyya labor land landowners living Luxor madhhab marriage married mawlid Middle East Ministry of Awqaf modern mosques Muhammad al-Idrisi Muhammad al-Sharif munshids Musha Muslim Nicholas Nile Valley Omdurman Peasant percent period political population Qena Qena governorate region religion religious rent Rifa'iyya role Rural Egypt Sa'idi Sa'idi identity Sa'idiyya saha saint Sanusiyya Shadhiliyya Shadhiliyya Idrisiyya shaykh society Sohag Southern Question Sudan Sufi orders Sufism Talbiyya Tariqa Tariqa Muhammadiyya tenants tion tourist town traditional tribal tribes University in Cairo University Press Upper Egypt Upper Egyptian urban women

