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Carmen M. K. Gitre is an assistant professor of history at Virginia Tech University. She holds a PhD in history from Rutgers University and previously taught in the international studies and history departments at Seattle University.
Acting Egyptian offers a rigorously researched scholarly
publication while avoiding the stuffiness of (some) academic
writing…Theatre, history, and other humanities scholars interested
in performance traditions and identity politics [in] the Middle
East and North Africa will find Acting Egyptian especially
worthwhile.
*Al Jadid*
This book is an important addition to a growing body of literature
that seeks to elucidate the 'full range' of Egyptian voices,
shining light on the cacophonous, bottom-up route by which national
culture is contested and refashioned by those with less
power...Gitre’s concise writing and the scope of her engagement
with the extant historiography in framing her intriguing case
studies makes Acting Egyptian an innovative introductory text to
the formation of Egyptian national identity.
*American Historical Review*
Gitre writes a rigorous and enjoyable book of social history that
points to exciting new avenues for Arabic theatre research...The
way that Gitre positions her subjects as both objects of elite
imaginations of collective identity and as active agents who
trouble these imaginaries owes much to her attention to the
slippages and inconsistencies of her archive. This, along with a
lively prose style and attentive historical framing, makes Acting
Egyptian an easily recommended book of social history, one that
anyone interested in global theatre and performance history can
learn from.
*Theatre Journal*
[An] excellent recent book...a lively study of the role of theater
in staging cultural debates over what it meant to be Egyptian and
modern, from 1869 (when both the Khedivial Opera House and the Suez
Canal opened) until 1930...Acting Egyptian engages with the
academic literature on Egypt and will appeal to historians and
Arabic literature specialists.
*Middle East Journal*
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