1.

Record Nr.

UNINA9910946478103321

Autore

Irving Sarah

Titolo

Colonial Vocabularies : Teaching and Learning Arabic, 1870-1970

Pubbl/distr/stampa

Amsterdam : , : Amsterdam University Press, , 2025

©2025

ISBN

1-04-077981-6

1-04-078411-9

1-003-69279-6

90-485-6040-3

Edizione

[1st ed.]

Descrizione fisica

1 online resource (284 pages)

Collana

Languages and Culture in History Series

Altri autori (Persone)

Sanchez-SummererKarene

MairsRachel

AdmiraalLucia

Soggetti

Arabic language - Study and teaching - History

HISTORY / Middle East / Israel & Palestine

Lingua di pubblicazione

Inglese

Formato

Materiale a stampa

Livello bibliografico

Monografia

Nota di contenuto

Frontmatter -- Table of Contents -- Notes on Transliteration -- List of Figures -- 1. Introduction -- 2. For God and empire : Arabic at the University of Edinburgh: Its development, character and mission -- 3. Arab intellectuals in Russia (nineteenth–twentieth century): Teaching, research and politics -- 4. “I hope you will teach your daughters to read” : Dialogues in Arabic language guides from nineteenth-century Egypt -- 5. “Like the bleating of a goat” : Teaching learners to pronounce the ‘difficult’ Arabic consonants (1798–1945) -- 6. The Manual of Palestinean [sic] Arabic: Politics in a late-Ottoman language textbook -- 7. “Send my regards to those working on the al-Balādhurī manuscript” : The study of Arabic and Islam in interwar Jerusalem as intellectual common ground -- 8. “Our Greek dignity and our educational autonomy” : Arabic language teaching in Greek schools, 1950s to 1970s -- 9. Arabic language teaching as a battleground : Colonial and nationalist myths and discourses on Arabic in Morocco -- 10. When Tamazight was part of the world -- Index



Sommario/riassunto

Language teaching and learning were crucial to Europeans’ colonial, national, and individual enterprises in the Levant, and in these processes, “Oriental language teachers” – as they were termed prior to the Second World War – were fundamental. European state nationalisms influenced and increasingly competed with each other by promoting their languages and cultures abroad, by means of both private and governmental actors. At the same time, learning Arabic became more prominent around the Mediterranean. The first half of the twentieth century corresponded with the emergence of new media; language was thought of as a cultural product to be exported into new cultural spaces. However, many blind spots remain in the history of linguistic thought and practices, including the forgotten and neglected voices of those involved in learning and teaching Arabic. This volume aims to revisit aspects of this linguistic encounter, including its vision, profile, priorities, trajectories, and practices.