Educating Egypt

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20th
21st century
A01=Dr. Linda Herrera
A01=Linda Herrera
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Anthropology
Author_Dr. Linda Herrera
Author_Linda Herrera
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citizen
citizenship
complexity
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Cultural & Social
Culture
curricula
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Department
digital technology
Education
Egypt
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ethnography
Gender
geopolitics
hegemonic
History
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Islamic Studies
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leadership
Linda Herrera
Middle East
nation-building
nationalism
North Africa
organization
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policy
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privitization
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research
Secondary
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Social Science
Sociology
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twentieth
twenty-first
unemployment
University of Illinois
Urbana-Champaign
Women
World
youth

Product details

  • ISBN 9781649031020
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 03 May 2022
  • Publisher: American University in Cairo Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
  • Language: English
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The everyday practices, policy ideas, and ideological and political battles that have shaped Egyptian education, from the era of nation-building in the twentieth century to the age of digital disruption in the twenty-first

From the 1952 revolution onward, a main purpose of formal education in Egypt was to socialize children and youth into adopting certain attitudes and behaviors conducive to the regimes in power. Control by the state over education was never entirely hegemonic. National education came increasingly under pressure due to a combination of the growing privatization of the education sector, the growth of political Islam, and rapidly changing digital technologies.

Educating Egypt traces the everyday practices, policy ideas, and ideological and political and economic contests over education from the era of nation-building in the twentieth century to the age of global change and digital disruption in the twenty-first. Its overarching theme is that schooling and education, broadly defined, have consistently mirrored larger debates about what constitutes the model citizen and the educated person. Drawing on three decades of ethnographic research inside Egyptian schools and among Egyptian youth, Linda Herrera asks what happens when education actors harbor fundamentally different ideas about the purpose, provision, and meaning of education. Her research shows that, far from serving as a unifying social force, education is in reality an ongoing battleground of interests, ideas, and visions of the good society.

Linda Herrera, a social anthropologist with regional expertise in North Africa and West Asia with a focus on Egypt, is a professor in the Department of Education Policy, Organization and Leadership at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. Her research deals broadly with education, citizenship, youth cultures, and geopolitics. Her books include, Revolution in the Age of Social Media: The Egyptian Popular Insurrection and the Internet, Wired Citizenship: Youth Learning and Activism in the Middle East, Being Young and Muslim: New Cultural Politics in the Global South and North (with A. Bayat), and Cultures of Arab Schooling: Critical Ethnographies from Egypt (with C.A. Torres).