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Popular Culture in Medieval Cairo Boaz Shoshan (Ben-Gurion University of the Negev, Israel)

Popular Culture in Medieval Cairo By Boaz Shoshan (Ben-Gurion University of the Negev, Israel)

Popular Culture in Medieval Cairo by Boaz Shoshan (Ben-Gurion University of the Negev, Israel)


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Summary

This is the first book-length study of popular culture in Islamic society, drawing together a wealth of Arabic sources to explore literature, religious celebrations and annual festivities in medieval Cairo and addressing questions of relevance throughout the Islamic world and beyond.

Popular Culture in Medieval Cairo Summary

Popular Culture in Medieval Cairo by Boaz Shoshan (Ben-Gurion University of the Negev, Israel)

This is the first book-length study of popular culture in Islamic society, drawing together a wealth of Arabic sources to explore literature, religious celebrations and annual festivities in medieval Cairo and addressing questions of relevance throughout the Islamic world and beyond. Dr Shoshan examines popular religion against the background of the growing influence of Sufism, discussing the sermons of Abn Ata Allah, a leading Cairene Sufi, which shed considerable light on the beliefs of ordinary Muslims. The author then analyses the importance of a biography of Muhammad, which has been attributed to Abu'l-Hasan al-Bakri and suppressed by the learned, and traces the origins and popular practices of the annual Nawruz festival. Finally he explores the political beliefs and economic expectations of the Cairene commoners and demonstrates the complex relationship between the culture of the Cairene elite and that of the people.

Popular Culture in Medieval Cairo Reviews

Through a nuanced, sophisticated analysis, Shoshan detects ceaseless interchange between the powerful and apparently powerless in the wider arena of urban culture. ...his work makes a substantial contribution to the corpus of scholarly literature on the medieval (and modern) Islamic Middle East. MESA Bulletin
With these informative studies, Shoshan provides considerable detail and valuable insights on which future historians can draw in shaping an analysis of religious culture of similar general scope... American Historical Review
...the breadth of his [Shoshan's] study and the wealth of detail brought together in this small book are valuable not only for their content but for the way in which each section suggests new strategies and kinds of materials which historians interested in popular culture or the lives of ordinary Muslims in premodern times may use to investigate their interests. Moreover, his attempt to cross scholarly frontiers, to find methodologies and concepts in work on medieval European culture, is valuable. In this respect the book is pathbreaking. International Journal of Middle East Studies
The appearance of a work that explores the outlook of individuals previously bypassed by historians, or noticed primarily when obstreperous, is a welcome event. Boaz Shoshan has confronted the glaring absence of sustained analysis by modern scholars on 'those socially inferior to the bourgeoisie; hence, supposedly also illiterate, at least by and large' with a series of thoughful essays that examine the culture of these people from several perspectives. Speculum
This is an excellent in-depth review of the subject....I found the book enlightening and fascinating....It is therefore recommended primarily for graduate students and faculty with the appropriate interest. Stephen J. Stillwell, Jr., Popular Culture in Libraries
...ambitious, crowding together a variety of intriguing sources ranging from sermons and hagiography to accounts of public processions and economic and political history....his work is commendable for its application to Islamic social history of an impressive range of methodologies. David Pinault, Journal of the American Oriental Society
...ambitious, crowding together a variety of intriguing sources ranging from sermons and hagiography to accounts of public processions and economic and political history....his work is commendable for its application to Islamic social history of an impressive range of methodologies. David Pinault, Journal of American Oriental Society
...these essays reward a close reading by opening windows on medieval Cairene society often assumed to have been nailed shut. Warren C. Schultz, Journal of Near Eastern Studies

Table of Contents

Introduction; 1. Sufism and the people; 2. Al-Bakri's biography of Muhammad; 3. The festival of Nawruz: A world turned upside down; 4. The politics and 'moral economy' of the Cairene crowd; 5. Popular culture and high culture in medieval Cairo; Appendix: Sufi Shaykhs in medieval Cairo.

Additional information

NLS9780521894296
9780521894296
0521894298
Popular Culture in Medieval Cairo by Boaz Shoshan (Ben-Gurion University of the Negev, Israel)
New
Paperback
Cambridge University Press
2002-05-16
168
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
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