The Great Social Laboratory charts the development of the human  sciences—anthropology, human geography, and demography—in late  nineteenth- and twentieth-century Egypt. Tracing both intellectual and  institutional genealogies of knowledge production, this book examines  social science through a broad range of texts and cultural artifacts,  ranging from the ethnographic museum, to architectural designs, to that  pinnacle of social scientific research—”the article.” 
The author explores the interface between European and Egyptian social  scientific discourses and interrogates the boundaries of knowledge  production in a colonial and post-colonial setting. She examines the  complex imperatives of race, class, and gender in the Egyptian colonial  context, uncovering the new modes of governance, expertise, and social  knowledge that defined a distinctive era of nationalist politics in the  inter- and post-war periods. Finally, she examines the discursive field  mapped out by colonial and nationalist discourses on the racial identity  of the modern Egyptians.
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Omnia El Shakry - The Great Social Laboratory: Subjects of Knowledge in Colonial and Postcolonial Egypt
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