Khaled Fahmy
Khaled Fahmy (Arabic: خالد فهمي) is a professor of history at the American University in Cairo. His research interests include the social and cultural history of the modern Middle East, with an emphasis on the history of the army, of medicine and of law in nineteenth-century Egypt.
Biography
Fahmy received his BA in economics (1985), then an MA in political science (1988) from the American University in Cairo. He then received a D Phil in economic and social history at St Peter's College, University of Oxford in 1993. Following his stay at Oxford he became an assistant professor in the Department of Near Eastern Studies at Princeton University (1994-1999). From 1999 to 2010 he was an associate professor in the Department of Middle Eastern and Islamic Studies at New York University.
In 2010, Fahmy returned to Egypt where he is currently professor in the Department of History at the American University in Cairo.[1] In 2014-2015 he was an Arcapita Visiting Professor at the Middle East Institute,Columbia University. In 2015-2016 he was the Shawwaf Visiting Professor in Modern Middle East History at Harvard University.[2]
Publications
Fahmy's dissertation on the social history of the army of Mehmed Ali Pasha was later published by Cambridge University Press under the title "All the Pasha's Men: Mehmed Ali: His Army and the Making of Modern Egypt.[3] An Arabic translation was published by Dar al-Shorouk. This was followed by a Turkish translation published by Bilgi University Press under the title "Paşa'nın Adamları:Kavalalı Mehmed Ali Paşa, Ordu ve Modern Mısır".[4]
Fahmy also wrote a biography of Mehmed Ali Pasha that appeared in the Makers of the Muslim World Series published by Oneworld Publications under the tile of "Mehmed Ali: From Ottoman Governor to Ruler of Egypt."[5] He published a collection of articles in Arabic on the history of law and medicine in nineteenth-century that appeared under the title " الجسد والحداثة: الطب والقانون في مصر الحديثة] . [6]
In addition to his books, Fahmy has published a number of academic articles on topics including midwifery,[7] false torture,[8] conscription,[9] cosmopolitanism,[10] the census,[11] urban planning,[12] prisons,[13] the police,[14] the smell of the modern city,[15] forensic medicine,[16] and prostitution[17] – all dealing with nineteenth-century Egypt.[18]
References
- ↑ "KHALED FAHMY". American University of Cairo. Retrieved 13 January 2015.
- ↑ "Shawwaf Visiting Professor". Center for Middle Eastern Studies, Harvard University.
- ↑ '
- ↑
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- ↑ midwifery
- ↑ torture
- ↑ conscription
- ↑ Alexandrian
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- ↑ prisons
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- ↑ prostitution
- ↑ "FAHMY, KHALED Representative publications". New York University. Retrieved 13 January 2015.