Utopia and civilisation in the Arab Nahda

<p>This doctoral thesis explores the contexts of utopian writing and thinking in the Nahda, the Arab 'Awakening' of the long nineteenth century. Utopian forms of social imagination were responses to fundamental changes in the societies of the Arab-Ottoman world brought about by integ...

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Main Author: Hill, P
Other Authors: Omri, M
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2015
Subjects:
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author Hill, P
author2 Omri, M
author_facet Omri, M
Hill, P
author_sort Hill, P
collection OXFORD
description <p>This doctoral thesis explores the contexts of utopian writing and thinking in the Nahda, the Arab 'Awakening' of the long nineteenth century. Utopian forms of social imagination were responses to fundamental changes in the societies of the Arab-Ottoman world brought about by integration into a capitalist world economy and a European-dominated political system. Much Nahda writing was permeated by a sense of a 'New Age' opening and of wide horizons for future change – and this was not simply illusory, but a direct response to actual and massive changes being wrought in the writers' social world. My study focusses on Egypt and Bil&amp;amacr;d al-Sh&amp;amacr;m in the middle decades of the nineteenth century, from the early 1830s to the mid-1870s. An initial chapter offers a definition of the social classes and groups which contributed to the Nahda in these years – such as the Beiruti bourgeoisie and the Egyptian-Ottoman official class – drawing on the work of Arab Marxists such as Mahd&amp;imacr; '&amp;Amacr;mil and social historians such as Bruce Masters. The following chapters deal in detail with writings produced by three distinct cultural formations within the Nahda movement, and with different aspects of their social imagination. Chapter 2 examines the discourse of civilisation <em>(tamaddun)</em> through the work of the Beiruti writers Khal&amp;imacr;l al-Kh&amp;umacr;r&amp;imacr; and Buṭrus al-Bust&amp;amacr;n&amp;imacr; in the 1850s and 1860s. Chapter 3 deals with Nahda writers' sense of their place within the European-dominated world, mainly through translations of geography books made by Rif&amp;amacr;'a al-Ṭahṭ&amp;amacr;w&amp;imacr; in Mehmed Ali's Egypt in the 1830s and 1840s. Chapter 4 examines the utopian aspirations of the Nahda, through a close study of the major utopian literary work of the period, Frans&amp;imacr;s Marr&amp;amacr;sh's <em>Gh&amp;amacr;bat al-Ḥaqq</em> (<em>The Forest of Justice</em>, 1865). Finally, a conclusion places my study in relation to other recent work in the field of 'Nahda studies'.</p>
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spelling oxford-uuid:9f6e0ac9-04c9-4f50-b4da-8a933b0c069f2022-03-27T00:57:40ZUtopia and civilisation in the Arab NahdaThesishttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_db06uuid:9f6e0ac9-04c9-4f50-b4da-8a933b0c069fHistoryTranslation studiesArabic literatureArab countriesEnglishORA Deposit2015Hill, POmri, MBooth, MFahmy, K<p>This doctoral thesis explores the contexts of utopian writing and thinking in the Nahda, the Arab 'Awakening' of the long nineteenth century. Utopian forms of social imagination were responses to fundamental changes in the societies of the Arab-Ottoman world brought about by integration into a capitalist world economy and a European-dominated political system. Much Nahda writing was permeated by a sense of a 'New Age' opening and of wide horizons for future change – and this was not simply illusory, but a direct response to actual and massive changes being wrought in the writers' social world. My study focusses on Egypt and Bil&amp;amacr;d al-Sh&amp;amacr;m in the middle decades of the nineteenth century, from the early 1830s to the mid-1870s. An initial chapter offers a definition of the social classes and groups which contributed to the Nahda in these years – such as the Beiruti bourgeoisie and the Egyptian-Ottoman official class – drawing on the work of Arab Marxists such as Mahd&amp;imacr; '&amp;Amacr;mil and social historians such as Bruce Masters. The following chapters deal in detail with writings produced by three distinct cultural formations within the Nahda movement, and with different aspects of their social imagination. Chapter 2 examines the discourse of civilisation <em>(tamaddun)</em> through the work of the Beiruti writers Khal&amp;imacr;l al-Kh&amp;umacr;r&amp;imacr; and Buṭrus al-Bust&amp;amacr;n&amp;imacr; in the 1850s and 1860s. Chapter 3 deals with Nahda writers' sense of their place within the European-dominated world, mainly through translations of geography books made by Rif&amp;amacr;'a al-Ṭahṭ&amp;amacr;w&amp;imacr; in Mehmed Ali's Egypt in the 1830s and 1840s. Chapter 4 examines the utopian aspirations of the Nahda, through a close study of the major utopian literary work of the period, Frans&amp;imacr;s Marr&amp;amacr;sh's <em>Gh&amp;amacr;bat al-Ḥaqq</em> (<em>The Forest of Justice</em>, 1865). Finally, a conclusion places my study in relation to other recent work in the field of 'Nahda studies'.</p>
spellingShingle History
Translation studies
Arabic literature
Arab countries
Hill, P
Utopia and civilisation in the Arab Nahda
title Utopia and civilisation in the Arab Nahda
title_full Utopia and civilisation in the Arab Nahda
title_fullStr Utopia and civilisation in the Arab Nahda
title_full_unstemmed Utopia and civilisation in the Arab Nahda
title_short Utopia and civilisation in the Arab Nahda
title_sort utopia and civilisation in the arab nahda
topic History
Translation studies
Arabic literature
Arab countries
work_keys_str_mv AT hillp utopiaandcivilisationinthearabnahda