“Even if the Sons of Rum are not like Him” The Spatial and Temporal Journey of a Late 19th Century Egyptian Song

This paper follows the material and discursive circulation of the Egyptian popular song “Fī-l-Jihādiyya” as it traveled from the urban context to Upper Egypt throughout the 19th century. The song narrates the farewell of a mother to her son recruited to war, and her helpless attempt to save him. I...

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Main Author: Olga Verlato
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Center for Near and Middle Eastern Studies 2018-06-01
Series:Middle East : Topics & Arguments
Subjects:
Online Access:http://localhost/ep/0003/article/view/7587
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spelling doaj-a42c5cd53706429c8f42f3793ff29e782020-11-24T21:29:47ZengCenter for Near and Middle Eastern Studies Middle East : Topics & Arguments2196-629X2018-06-011010.17192/meta.2018.10.7587“Even if the Sons of Rum are not like Him” The Spatial and Temporal Journey of a Late 19th Century Egyptian SongOlga Verlato0New York University This paper follows the material and discursive circulation of the Egyptian popular song “Fī-l-Jihādiyya” as it traveled from the urban context to Upper Egypt throughout the 19th century. The song narrates the farewell of a mother to her son recruited to war, and her helpless attempt to save him. I explore how centuries-old local forms of mobility enacted by authors and performers intersected with the infrastructural changes in transportation under British colonization increasingly since the third quarter of the 19th century. Additionally, by reflecting on the long durée of the song’s circulation and performative replication, I investigate the continuities within the military social infrastructure throughout the century, and argue that the ongoing exploitation of Upper Egyptian soldiers helps explain the endurance of “Fī-l-Jihādiyya’s” social relevance. I thus provide a case for the study of material and social infrastructures as interrelated realms of analysis, specifically with respect to the different implications of the material and social mobilities that my analysis uncovers. http://localhost/ep/0003/article/view/7587transportation-infrastructuresmobilityEgyptarmypopular culture19th century
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Olga Verlato
spellingShingle Olga Verlato
“Even if the Sons of Rum are not like Him” The Spatial and Temporal Journey of a Late 19th Century Egyptian Song
Middle East : Topics & Arguments
transportation-infrastructures
mobility
Egypt
army
popular culture
19th century
author_facet Olga Verlato
author_sort Olga Verlato
title “Even if the Sons of Rum are not like Him” The Spatial and Temporal Journey of a Late 19th Century Egyptian Song
title_short “Even if the Sons of Rum are not like Him” The Spatial and Temporal Journey of a Late 19th Century Egyptian Song
title_full “Even if the Sons of Rum are not like Him” The Spatial and Temporal Journey of a Late 19th Century Egyptian Song
title_fullStr “Even if the Sons of Rum are not like Him” The Spatial and Temporal Journey of a Late 19th Century Egyptian Song
title_full_unstemmed “Even if the Sons of Rum are not like Him” The Spatial and Temporal Journey of a Late 19th Century Egyptian Song
title_sort “even if the sons of rum are not like him” the spatial and temporal journey of a late 19th century egyptian song
publisher Center for Near and Middle Eastern Studies
series Middle East : Topics & Arguments
issn 2196-629X
publishDate 2018-06-01
description This paper follows the material and discursive circulation of the Egyptian popular song “Fī-l-Jihādiyya” as it traveled from the urban context to Upper Egypt throughout the 19th century. The song narrates the farewell of a mother to her son recruited to war, and her helpless attempt to save him. I explore how centuries-old local forms of mobility enacted by authors and performers intersected with the infrastructural changes in transportation under British colonization increasingly since the third quarter of the 19th century. Additionally, by reflecting on the long durée of the song’s circulation and performative replication, I investigate the continuities within the military social infrastructure throughout the century, and argue that the ongoing exploitation of Upper Egyptian soldiers helps explain the endurance of “Fī-l-Jihādiyya’s” social relevance. I thus provide a case for the study of material and social infrastructures as interrelated realms of analysis, specifically with respect to the different implications of the material and social mobilities that my analysis uncovers.
topic transportation-infrastructures
mobility
Egypt
army
popular culture
19th century
url http://localhost/ep/0003/article/view/7587
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