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Disarming Words Empire And The Seductions Of Translation In Egypt 1st Edition Shaden M Tageldin

  • SKU: BELL-2360460
Disarming Words Empire And The Seductions Of Translation In Egypt 1st Edition Shaden M Tageldin
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Disarming Words Empire And The Seductions Of Translation In Egypt 1st Edition Shaden M Tageldin instant download after payment.

Publisher: University of California Press
File Extension: PDF
File size: 2.57 MB
Pages: 369
Author: Shaden M. Tageldin
ISBN: 9780520265523, 0520265521
Language: English
Year: 2011
Edition: 1

Product desciption

Disarming Words Empire And The Seductions Of Translation In Egypt 1st Edition Shaden M Tageldin by Shaden M. Tageldin 9780520265523, 0520265521 instant download after payment.

In a book that radically challenges conventional understandings of the dynamics of cultural imperialism, Shaden M. Tageldin unravels the complex relationship between translation and seduction in the colonial context. She examines the afterlives of two occupations of Egypt--by the French in 1798 and by the British in 1882--in a rich comparative analysis of acts, fictions, and theories that translated the European into the Egyptian, the Arab, or the Muslim. Tageldin finds that the encounter with European Orientalism often invited colonized Egyptians to imagine themselves "equal" to or even "masters" of their colonizers, and thus, paradoxically, to translate themselves toward--virtually into--the European. Moving beyond the domination/resistance binary that continues to govern understandings of colonial history, Tageldin redefines cultural imperialism as a politics of translational seduction, a politics that lures the colonized to seek power through empire rather than against it, thereby repressing its inherent inequalities. She considers, among others, the interplays of Napoleon and Hasan al-'Attar; Rifa'a al-Tahtawi, Silvestre de Sacy, and Joseph Agoub; Cromer, 'Ali Mubarak, Muhammad al-Siba'i, and Thomas Carlyle; Ibrahim 'Abd al-Qadir al-Mazini, Muhammad Husayn Haykal, and Ahmad Hasan al-Zayyat; and Salama Musa, G. Elliot Smith, Naguib Mahfouz, and Lawrence Durrell. In conversation with new work on translation, comparative literature, imperialism, and nationalism, Tageldin engages postcolonial and poststructuralist theorists from Frantz Fanon, Edward Said, and Gayatri Spivak to Jean Baudrillard, Walter Benjamin, Emile Benveniste, and Jacques Derrida.

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