Modernizing marriage : family, ideology, and law in nineteenth and early twentieth century Egypt

Bibliographic Information

Modernizing marriage : family, ideology, and law in nineteenth and early twentieth century Egypt

Kenneth M. Cuno

(Gender and globalization / Susan S. Wadley, series editor)

Syracuse University Press, 2015

  • : cloth

Available at  / 2 libraries

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Note

Includes bibliographical references (p. 267-289) and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

In 1910, when Khedive Abbas II married a second wife surreptitiously, the contrast with his openly polygamous grandfather, Ismail, whose multiple wives and concubines signified his grandeur and masculinity, could not have been greater. That contrast reflected the spread of new ideals of family life that accompanied the development of Egypt's modern marriage system. Modernizing Marriage explores the evolution of marriage and marital relations, shedding new light on the social and cultural history of Egypt. Family is central to modern Egyptian history. Family in the ruling court did the "political work," and, indeed, the modern state began as a household government in which members of the ruler's household seved in the military and civil service. Cuno discusses political and sociodemographic changes that affected marriage and family life and the production of a family ideology by modernist intellectuals, who identified the family as a site crucial to social improvement, and for whom the reform and codification of Muslim family law was a principal aim. Throughout Modernizing Marriage, Cuno examines Egyptian family history in a comparative and transnational context, addressing issues of colonial modernity and colonial knowledge, Islamic law and legal reform, social history, and the history of women and gender.

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