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On Time

Technology and Temporality in Modern Egypt

On Barak

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Geisteswissenschaften, Kunst, Musik / Geschichte

Beschreibung

In this pioneering history of transportation and communication in the modern Middle East, On Barak argues that contrary to accepted wisdom technological modernity in Egypt did not drive a sense of time focused on standardization only. Surprisingly, the introduction of the steamer, railway, telegraph, tramway, and telephone in colonial Egypt actually triggered the development of unique timekeeping practices that resignified and subverted the typical modernist infatuation with expediency and promptness. These countertempos, predicated on uneasiness over "dehumanizing" European standards of efficiency, sprang from and contributed to non-linear modes of arranging time.

Barak shows how these countertempos formed and developed with each new technological innovation during the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, contributing to a particularly Egyptian sense of time that extends into the present day, exerting influence over contemporary political language in the Arab world. The universal notion of a modern mechanical standard time and the deviations supposedly characterizing non-Western settings "from time immemorial," On Time provocatively argues, were in fact mutually constitutive and mutually reinforcing.

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Schlagwörter

transportation, 20th century, communication, non standard time, chronometry, modernization, technological innovations, middle east, historians, concept of time, arab world, middle east scholars, time deviations, non linear time, anthropologists, non western time, technology, countertempos, modern egypt, egyptian history, sense of time, 19th century, anthropology, temporality, timekeeping practices, modern history, egypt, standard time, nonfiction