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Cairo: The City Victorious

Cairo: The City Victorious
By Max Rodenbeck

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Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #893907 in Books
  • Published on: 1999-10-08
  • Original language: English
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 400 pages

Editorial Reviews

Synopsis
Max Rodenbeck's biography of Cairo combines a sweeping timescale with a keen eye for telling detail. It traces the life of Cairo from birth, through the heights of medieval splendour and down to the present day.


Customer Reviews

If you never visit Cairo, this is still a book to enjoy.5
Having lived much of his life in Cairo, Rodenbeck disparages its rich, intent on creating their own plastic California - what is the Egyptian for McDonald's? He prefers its proletarian quarters; Cairo, we discover, has a sense of humour.

The city is a geographical inevitability. It nestles, like vocal cords, in the neck of the Nile Valley, between Africa and Asia, across from Europe. Echoing to the languages of the Pharaohs, Greece, Rome, Islam, France, and England, it has seen many guises.

There was a thriving community there 3000 years before Christians numbered the millennia - an economic, social, and cultural crossroads. For half its life it was at the heart of an autonomous Egypt. The Greeks and Romans, however, relegated it to colonial subservience.

Cairo became the plaything of invading armies and evangelists. History and armies course through Cairo, as unhurried and irresistible as the Nile.

Yet Rodenbeck presents modern Cairo as a youthful, bustling place. Densely packed, it makes Manhattan look like a newly settled wilderness. People jam available rooms: homeless children spill onto the streets fighting for breath in the press of motor cars.

Home to a quarter of Egypt's population, Cairo dreams of being the cultural, political and economic powerhouse of the Middle East and North Africa: it may simply be dazzled by the glory of its past, pursuing a modernity it can never achieve.

Arab tourists flock to Cairo as a seat of Arab culture; Westerners come to consume antiquity. A legacy of ancient civilisation can be stultifying - tourism ossifies life. Meanwhile politicians have abdicated responsibility for its re-creation as a modern capital: political energies are dissipated in an ideological struggle between Islamic fundamentalism and modernism.

Rodenbeck carries the reader through thousands of years of Cairene life. He treats culture - even ancient culture - as a dynamic, living thing, presenting modern Cairo as a place of contrasts and extremes. Exciting, vibrant, refusing to become a museum, Cairo's hourglass has limitless sands.

Rodenbeck doesn't treat us to a long history, reducing the present to mere adjunct, a consequence of history with no life of its own; nor does he regale the reader with a gushing travelogue of things to do, places to see, bargains to collect. Cities are living places which can't be summed up in terms of sites and sound-bites.

Cairo: the City Victorious should be read, not left on the shelf. If you never visit, this is still a book to enjoy. It questions how cities age and change. Rodenbeck's argues they live because the people in them live. They become theme-parks only if and when their inhabitants cannot imagine any other future. Cairo's smile hasn't yet become the anodyne grimace which accompanies anonymous fast food - it remains one of genuine amusement and joie de vivre.

An excellent account of Cairo, Egyptians, and the ME5
Max Rodenbeck takes on a huge subject and manages to succesfully capture the spirit of Cairo, it's people, history, religion, turmoils and future. Unlike other books on the subject, Rodenbeck doesn't give you a bland historical perspective, but manages to give the reader a 'Fly on the wall' feeling. By doing so, he brings to life the the anguish,fear and joy of the variouys people that have molded Cairo into what it is today. I have read this book twice in the past month already, and would recommend it to any one interested in Cairo, Egypt and the Middle East. It also gives a very honest account, of arabs and egyptians in particular and the misconceptions held in the west.

A wonderful introduction to one of the great cities.4
I have been to Cairo several times, and have a basic grasp of some of the history. This book, however, opened my eyes. I learnt an incredible amount about the history of this immense city, stretching back thousands of years. The narrative skillfully combines history with the author's own unique perspective, and you can certainly sympathise with his somewhat mixed response to the city and the people. He details the corruption and heavy bureaucracy which have crippled Egypt in recent years, but also mentions the charming mannerisms of the Egyptians, for example constantly beeping their horns, as well as their endless generosity. What impresses me the most about this book is, however, the way that Rodenbeck moves seemlessly through a period of 5,000 years.

This book is intended as a starting point, one from which readers can delve deeper into particular periods that fascinate them. I personally particularly enjoyed the chapters on Colonial Egypt, as it was fascinating to learn about the changes the French and then British brought about.

This is a genuinely fascinating read about a genuinely unique city. I would recommend this to anyone who would like to improve their knowledge about Cairo, or just gain a basic overview of the dramatic circumstances which have led to, to quote Rodenbeck the development of 'the greatest city in the world'.