Nota di contenuto |
Frontmatter -- Contents -- Acknowledgments -- Note on Arabic Transliteration -- List of Maps, Figures, Tables and Graphs -- Volume 1 -- Introduction: Bringing Ordinary People Back into Sudan Studies -- Part 1: Social History, Political Engagement and Archival Issues -- Chapter 1 Re-examining the “Sources of the Sudanese Revolution”: Discussing the Social History of Sudan after the December 2018 Revolution -- Chapter 2 Sudanese Women’s Participation in the December 2018 Revolution: Historical Roots and Mobilisation Patterns -- Chapter 3 From the Terraces of Celebrated Narratives to the Cellars of Tarnished History: Obliterating Knowledge in Sudanese and Arab Historiography -- Part 2: Retrieving Women’s Agency in Sudanese History and Society -- Chapter 4 Women in the Funj Era as Evidenced in the Kitāb Ṭabaqāt Wad Ḍayfallāh -- Chapter 5 Emancipation through the Press: The Women’s Movement and its Discourses on the “Women’s Problem” in Sudan on the Eve of Independence (1950–1956) -- Chapter 6 For the Sake of Moderation: The Sudanese General Women’s Union’s Interpretations of Female “Empowerment” (1990–2019) -- Part 3: Armed Men between Global Connections and Local Practices -- Chapter 7 The Sudanese Soldiers Who Went to Mexico (1863–1867): A Global History from the Nile Valley to North America -- Chapter 8 Bāsh-Būzūq and Artillery Men: Sudan, Eritrea and the Transnational Market for Military Work (1885–1918) -- Chapter 9 Police Models in Sudan: General Features and Historical Development -- Volume 2 -- Part 4: Urban Life, Queer History, and Leisure in Colonial Times -- Chapter 10 The Urban Fabric between Tradition and Modernity (1885–1956): Omdurman, Khartoum, and the British Master Plan of 1910 -- Chapter 11 Colonial Morality and Local Traditions: British Policies and Sudanese Attitudes Towards Alcohol, 1898–1956 -- Chapter 12 Colonial Homophobia: Externalising Queerness in Condominium Sudan -- Chapter 13 Cinema, Southern Sudan and the End of Empire, 1943–1965 -- Part 5: Labour Identities, Practices and Institutions -- Chapter 14 The Borgeig Pump Scheme in Wartime Colonial Sudan (1942–1945): Social Hierarchies, Labour and Native Administration -- Chapter 15 Industrial Relations in a British Bank in 1960s Sudan -- Chapter 16 Being Dayāma: Social Formation and Political Mobilisation in a Working Class Neighbourhood of Khartoum -- Chapter 17 Midwifery in the Nuba Mountains/South Kordofan as Vocation, Education, and Practice (1970s–2011) -- Part 6: The Ordinary Doing and Undoing of the Establishment -- Chapter 18 Governing Men and their Souls: The Making of a Mahdist Society in Eastern Sudan (1883–1891) -- Chapter 19 Liberation from Fear: Regional Mobilisation in Sudan after the 1964 Revolution -- Chapter 20 Education, Violence, and Transitional Uncertainties: Teaching “Military Sciences” in Sudan, 2005–2011 -- Chapter 21 The “Civilisational Project” from Below: Everyday Politics, Social Mobility and Neighbourhood Morality under the Late Inqādh Regime -- Notes on Contributors -- Index
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