Book Launch: Seeking Bread and Fortune in Port Said

OBS: New time: 12.45! Welcome to the book launch for Lucia Carminati's new book Seeking Bread and Fortune in Port Said, which probes migrant labor's role in shaping the history of the Suez Canal and modern Egypt.

book cover and photo of the author

Seeking Bread and Fortune in Port Said: Labor Migration and the Making of the Suez Canal, 1859-1906. Oakland: University of California Press, 2023. Photo of Lucia Carminati: Olaf Christensen.

Please notice that this event has a new time: 12.45-14.00 (same date).

Seeking Bread and Fortune in Port Said. Labor Migration and the Making of the Suez Canal, 1859–1906 maps the everyday life of Port Said's residents between 1859, when the town was founded as the Suez Canal's northern harbor, and 1906, when a railway connected it to the rest of Egypt. Through groundbreaking research, Lucia Carminati provides a ground-level perspective on the key processes touching late nineteenth-century Egypt: heightened domestic mobility and immigration, intensified urbanization, changing urban governance, and growing foreign encroachment. By privileging migrants' prosaic lives, Seeking Bread and Fortune in Port Said shows how unevenness and inequality laid the groundwork for the Suez Canal's making.

Lucia Carminati is associate professor of History in the Department of Archaeology, Conservation and History at the University of Oslo. She is a social and cultural historian of migration and the modern Middle East. In particular, she researches Egypt in the 19th and 20th centuries with a special focus on migratory routes and mobility at large, imperial interests, and infrastructural transformations. Other than in her recently published monograph (Seeking Bread and Fortune, Labor Migration and the Making of the Suez Canal, 1859–1906, University of California Press, 2023), her research appeared in the International Journal of Middle East Studies, Journal of Middle East Women’s Studies, Journal of the History of Sexuality, History Compass, Journal of Urban History, Rethinking History, and Comparative Studies in Society and History. She is also finalizing a digitization and preservation project with a grant of the British Library's Endangered Archives Programme that makes 70,000 periodical pages of 19th- and 20th century collections from Cairo available on the British Library website. She describes this project in a recent multi-lingual blog post.

Program: 

  • Presentation of the book with Lucia Carminati
  • Comments by Toufoul Abou Hodeib (Associate Professor in History, IAKH, UiO) and Teresa Pepe (Associate Professor in Arabic Studies, Chair of CIMS, IKOS, UiO)
  • Q&A

The book launch takes place at Scene HumSam in the Humanities and Social Sciences Library in Georg Sverdrups hus, Blindern.

Open to all. Welcome!

Published Nov. 15, 2023 12:26 PM - Last modified Dec. 5, 2023 12:56 PM