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Crossing Continents: Global Microhistory from Egypt and the Sudan

Autor Heather J. Sharkey
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 17 sep 2026
1825, a giraffe boarded a boat at Sennar, near the junction of the Blue and White Niles in the Sudan and sailed for Paris. In the next year, also at Sennar, a Kurdish cavalry officer named Mahu Bey Urfali, representing the Muhammad Ali Pasha regime of Egypt, died of smallpox in a military encampment. What was a Kurd from Urfa, now in southeastern Turkey, doing in the Sudan? Why did a giraffe make the long trip to Paris? And how did a sleepy town 300 km southeast of Khartoum, once the capital of a sultanate, figure in their life journeys? This book answers such questions by viewing the lives of seven remarkable individuals through the lens of global microhistory, to reveal a kaleidoscopic story of peoples, places, objects and ideas as they moved through the Nile Valley and wider world.

The book connects small places and little things to big events across two centuries. It asks: Who or what counts as important in history? Which details deserve attention? And how can we assemble fragmentary sources about ordinary people to give meaningful accounts of the past? Addressing these questions, this learned but accessible study will appeal to university students and scholars of Middle Eastern, African, and global history.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9780755692132
ISBN-10: 0755692136
Pagini: 304
Dimensiuni: 156 x 234 mm
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury Academic
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom

Cuprins

List of Illustrations and Credit Lines
Acknowledgements
Chapter 1. Introduction: Global Microhistory and Mobility in the Nile Valley
Chapter 2. Zarafa: The Giraffe Who Went to France
Chapter 3. Ali Gifoon and Abd al-Rahman Musa: The Sudanese Soldiers Who Went to Mexico
Chapter 4. Bamba: The Maharaja's Bride
Chapter 5. Ahmed Fahmy: The Egyptian Doctor of Changchow, China
Chapter 6. Molly Crowfoot: Scholar, Maker, Mover, Shaker
Chapter 7. Henry Athanassian: The Armenian Accountant Who Survived Two Empires
Chapter 8. Conclusion: History Is Everything
Bibliography

Recenzii

Crossing Continents is a book that excites wonder. Taking readers by the hand with her engaging prose, Heather Sharkey introduces us one-by-one to a set of keyholes through which she captures a view of the fascinating connected histories of Egypt, the Sudan, and the world in an age of empire, mobility, and globalization... Building from over a decade's worth of purposeful, capacious detective work across a constellation of Middle Eastern, European and global archives, Sharkey conjures up the voices of individuals whose lives, families, and fortunes were carried on the tides of some of the most important events of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries from the Franco-Prussian War to the Boxer Uprising to the Suez Crisis. Moreover, she brings to these 'small worlds' not only the precise, analytical tools of the historian, but also insights drawn from anthropology, sociology, museum studies, and the study of material culture. A testament to a scholar's joy for the historian's craft, Crossing Continents is global history at its best: empathetic, multilingual, and ambitious in its storytelling. This is a book that will move and inspire readers who are looking for a usable past, one in which everyone counts and every place matters.
Heather J. Sharkey's Crossing Continents is a masterful and innovative work of global microhistory, reimagined through the vivid stories of remarkable lives-including that of a giraffe. With rich storytelling and meticulous research, Sharkey reveals the interconnectedness of the modern world and demonstrates how ordinary individuals helped shape transcontinental connections, challenging conventional narratives of cores and peripheries. A must-read for anyone interested in history through diverse, human-centered narratives.