Revolutionary Melodrama: Popular Film and Civic Identity in Nasser's Egypt - Chicago Studies on the Middle East (Hardback)
  • Revolutionary Melodrama: Popular Film and Civic Identity in Nasser's Egypt - Chicago Studies on the Middle East (Hardback)
zoom

Revolutionary Melodrama: Popular Film and Civic Identity in Nasser's Egypt - Chicago Studies on the Middle East (Hardback)

(author)
£52.50
Hardback Published: 31/12/2002
  • We can order this from the publisher

UK delivery within 4-5 weeks

  • This item has been added to your basket


Revolutionary Melodrama explores intersections between cinema and politics during the Nasser era, a period in which a military regime embarked upon the construction of a new civic identity for an independent Egypt. The way in which filmmakers participated in this venture provides the focal point, with their cultural production as the central texts which both shaped and were shaped by an emerging sense of a new Egypt. With the blessing of a "revolutionary" regime, filmmakers began to explore issues of social inequity, colonial and feudal exploitation, changing gender roles, religious and cultural traditions and, finally, the disappointments of the revolutionary project itself.

No realm of cultural production holds greater import for the Nasser era than the cinema. Even those who are active in deconstructing the last vestiges of the Nasserist state trumpet the Nasser era as a "golden age" of the arts and media. The faces and voices on big and little screens, many still alive, some still working, constitute a pantheon who many Egyptians, young and old alike, feel will never be replaced.

The author approaches his subject as a scholar of the early Nasser years who has turned his attention to questions of civic identity and its relationship to art and political symbology. The work is enriched and informed by extensive interviews with a large circle of people engaged in the production or analysis of Egyptian cinema and broadcast, then and now: directors, actors, critics, historians, scenarists, censors, musicians, writers, politicians, and government ministers.

Egyptian film remains a largely ignored topic in an ever-growing literature on film and culture. This book sheds new light on what many consider to be the greatest era of Egyptian filmmaking, one that remains formative for many engaged in creating Egyptian films today.






Publisher: University of Chicago, Middle East Documentation Center
ISBN: 9780970819901
Weight: 651 g
Dimensions: 231 x 152 mm


MEDIA REVIEWS


You may also be interested in...

Pulp Fiction
Added to basket
£11.99
Paperback
Scenes From A Revolution
Added to basket
Film Studies For Dummies
Added to basket
It's Only a Movie
Added to basket
£10.99
Paperback
Bringing Up Baby
Added to basket
£11.99
Paperback
Save the Cat! Goes to the Movies
Added to basket
Cinema I
Added to basket
£21.99
Paperback
The Definitive Guide To Screenwriting
Added to basket
Pan's Labyrinth
Added to basket
Alien
Added to basket
£12.99
Paperback
Jaws
Added to basket
£11.99
Paperback
Story
Added to basket
£25.00
Paperback
The Good, The Bad and The Multiplex
Added to basket

Please sign in to write a review

Your review has been submitted successfully.

env: aptum
branch: