A Trade like Any Other

A Trade like Any Other

Author: Karin van Nieuwkerk

Publisher: University of Texas Press

Published: 2010-07-05

Total Pages: 246

ISBN-13: 0292786808

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In Egypt, singing and dancing are considered essential on happy occasions. Professional entertainers often perform at weddings and other celebrations, and a host family's prestige rises with the number, expense, and fame of the entertainers they hire. Paradoxically, however, the entertainers themselves are often viewed as disreputable people and are accorded little prestige in Egyptian society. This paradox forms the starting point of Karin van Nieuwkerk's look at the Egyptian entertainment trade. She explores the lives of female performers and the reasons why work they regard as "a trade like any other" is considered disreputable in Egyptian society. In particular, she demonstrates that while male entertainers are often viewed as simply "making a living," female performers are almost always considered bad, seductive women engaged in dishonorable conduct. She traces this perception to the social definition of the female body as always and only sexual and enticing—a perception that stigmatizes women entertainers even as it simultaneously offers them a means of livelihood. Drawn from extensive fieldwork and enriched with the life stories of entertainers and nightclub performers, this is the first ethnography of female singers and dancers in present-day Egypt. It will be of interest to a wide audience in anthropology, women's studies, and Middle Eastern culture, as well as anyone who enjoys belly dancing.


The Craft of a Good Scribe

The Craft of a Good Scribe

Author: Steve Vinson

Publisher: BRILL

Published: 2017-11-06

Total Pages: 370

ISBN-13: 9004353100

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In The Craft of a Good Scribe, Steve Vinson offers a comprehensive study of the Demotic Egyptian First Tale of Setne Khaemwas (Third Century BCE), the first to appear since 1900. "First Setne" is the most important extant Demotic literary text, and among the most important fictional compositions from any period of ancient Egypt. The tale, which is by turns lurid, tragic and ultimately comic, deals with Setne's theft of a magic book written by the god Thoth himself, and subsequently Setne's punishment through a hallucinatory encounter with the ghostly femme fatale Tabubue. Vinson provides a new textual edition and commentary, and explores the tale's cultural background, its modern reception, and approaches to its interpretation as a work of literature.


In 1926

In 1926

Author: Hans Ulrich Gumbrecht

Publisher: Harvard University Press

Published: 1997

Total Pages: 528

ISBN-13: 9780674000551

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From the vantage points of Berlin, Buenos Aires and New York, the author opens up the space-time continuum by exploring the realities of the day in 1926, from dance crazes and hair gel through to the voice of Hitler and a look at assembly lines.