1st Edition
Subalterns and Social Protest History from Below in the Middle East and North Africa
Introduction / Stephanie Cronin
Part One: The Urban Crowd and Popular Protest
1. Street Violence and Social Imagination in Late Mamluk and Ottoman Damascus / James Grehan
2. Women and Popular Protest: women’s demonstrations in nineteenth century Iran / Vanessa Martin
Part Two: Poor People’s Politics
3. Popular Protest, the Market and the State in Nineteenth and early Twentieth Century Egypt / John Chalcraft
4. Workless Revolutionaries: the movement of the unemployed in post-revolutionary Iran / Asef Bayat
5. Transforming the city from below: shanty-town dwellers and the fight for electricity in Casablanca / Lamia Zaki
Part Three: Peasants and Nomads
6. Resisting the New State: the rural poor, land and modernity in Iran, 1921-1941 / Stephanie Cronin
Part Four: Marginals and Outcasts
7. Exploring the Margins of Ottoman Society: "disorderly" Gypsies" / Failk Celik
8. Emancipated Female Slaves in Algiers: marriage, property and social advancement in the seventeeth and eighteenth centuries / Fatiha Loualich
Part Five: European Subalterns
9. "Making It" in Pre-Colonial Tunis: migration, work and poverty in a Mediterranean port-city, c. 1815-1870 / Julia Clancy-Smith
10. Foreign Workers in Egypt 1882-1914: subalterns or labour aristocracy? / Antony Gorman
Part Six: Subalterns and National Movements
11. From National Heroes to National Villains: Bandits and the formation of modern Greece / Gerassimos Karabelias
12. Seizing the Initiative, Regaining a Voice: the al-Aqsa Intifada as a strategy of the marginalized / Roger Heacock
Biography
Stephanie Cronin is Iran Heritage Foundation Fellow at the University of Northampton. Her most recent book is Tribal Politics in Iran: Rural Conflict and the New State, 1921–1941, also published by Routledge.
'As an exploratory attempt to bring the methods and concerns of "History from below" to the region, the book is a clear success' - R.S.G. Fletcher, Asian Affairs, 2008
' In terms of historical span, extending from the 16th century to the present, and its geographical diversity, the collection is a unique contribution to the effort of recovering the subaltern margins of society' - Nazan Maksudyan, International Journal of Middle East Studies. 42 (2010)






