Aufsatz(elektronisch)1. Dezember 2019

Law, Medicine, and the Meaning of the Modern State in Nineteenth-Century Egypt: Bringing History and Humanity to Bear on Ideology

In: Bustan: the Middle East book review, Band 10, Heft 2, S. 144-157

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Abstract

Abstract
Khaled Fahmy mounts a significant challenge to conventional assessments of the modern state in the Middle East. He does this by foregrounding the human bodily detail of the practice of the emerging modern state and bureaucracy in nineteenth-century Egypt. He tells a new story of the bottom-up and gradual construction of the modern state in the detail of everyday facts of being human: being born, getting ill, defecating, bad smells, proving your identity, and wanting justice for your loved ones. Modernizing practices of law and medicine are shown to have intersected in ways that materially and institutionally made possible new kinds of choices and values involving specific persons and predicaments. He thus brings to life what the emergence of the modern state meant in the messy reality of human living in a way that challenges prevailing ideologies that reduce modernity to the impersonal causality of ideas and essences.

Sprachen

Englisch

Verlag

The Pennsylvania State University Press

ISSN: 1878-5328

DOI

10.5325/bustan.10.2.0144

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