
Contents
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The second half The second half
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The referee The referee
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Name of the game Name of the game
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Preparing the playing field Preparing the playing field
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Last season's box scores Last season's box scores
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Lessons from seasons past Lessons from seasons past
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Prologue Take them out of the ball game - Egypt's cultural players in crisis
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Published:September 2010
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Abstract
The moment of confrontation between political and cultural figures in Egypt encapsulates the nature of their mutually dependent relationship since Muhammad Ali's modernization project (1805–49) and the ensuing years of the nahda—the cultural “awakening” in Egypt and the Arab world. To transform Egypt from an Ottoman province into a modern regional power, Muhammad Ali initiated a series of modern Western institutions within a traditional, Islamic cultural context that had been dominated by its religious rite, the ulama. For Egyptian cultural figures, this history has meant that the cultural is the handmaiden of the political and must always abide by its rules. The cultural has always been dependent largely on the space it is granted by the political field in the latter's own calculations of power. The end result is the weakness of a modernist paradigm that is developed and sustained from within the cultural field itself.
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