Egypt Ignited
por Verso
Agotado
Precio original
$34.95
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Precio original
$34.95
Precio original
$34.95
$34.95
-
$34.95
Precio actual
$34.95
Description
A gripping history of nineteenth century Egypt reveals how steam, debt, and animal viral disease powered capitalism’s spread—turning the Nile Valley into an early front in the global war over energy and empire.
Egypt Ignited offers a gripping global history of how fossil capital—and the warming it unleashed—spread far beyond Europe. Beginning in the 1820s, Egypt became one of the first non-European countries to pursue steam-driven industrialization after Britain. This radically new account of 19th-century Egypt traces how fossil capital took root in the Nile Valley, entangling imperial ambition, forced dependency, debt, and colonialism. From European engineers and financiers to Pashas, peasants, and plantation workers, Khairy follows the human and environmental toll of industrial modernity—boilers exploding, oxen dying in polluted canals, rebels executed for resisting machines they believed were powered by underground demons demanding their children's futures.A sweeping story of empire, extraction, and resistance, this is a vital history of capitalism’s global spread—and the climate catastrophe it set in motion.Chapter One: Introduction
1.1. Things Ignited
1.2. This Book
1.3. Historicising the Capitalocene, Energy, and Technology: To Study All History Anew
1.4. Historical Materialism and Global Warming
1.5. Outline of the Book
Part I: The Frustrated Empire
Chapter Two: The Industrial Revolution That Never Happened (1820s-30s)
2.1. Ox Power, Man Power, Horse Power
2.2. 1820s: “Have You Been Able to Procure Coal? Have You Bored at All?”
2.3. Wind, Water, and Trees
2.4. Conclusion
Chapter Three: The Power Crisis (1838 – 48)33
3.1. In Syria’s Coal Mines, “Preoccupied with his Industrial Thoughts”
3.2. The Squeeze, and the Fightback
3.3. The Plague and the Chiflik
3.4. The Birth of the Private Estates/Cattle Murrain Combination
3.5. Murrain/Steam Technology Combination
3.6. Conclusion: “Coal! Coal! Coal! That Is the One Thing Needful For Me”
Chapter Four: The Sugar Factory, the Cornish Pump, the Mud Machine (1848 – 55)
4.1. What Pashmuhandis Eyth Did Not See
4.2. Early 1850s: Steam for White Sugar
4.3. Early 1850s: The Mud Machine, the Cornish Pump
4.4. Conclusion
Chapter Five: The “Want of Capital”… The Cotton Gin (1855-63)
5.1. Pre-boom Gins
5.2. The Cotton Boom…“the Want of Capital”
5.3. Conclusion: Steam Technology and Loans
Part II: Combustible Carbon
Chapter Six: The Age of Debt, Steam Engines, and Bankruptcy (1863 – 76)
6.1. Loans as Bridges
6.2. Luxemburg’s Second Argument: International Loans and the Accumulation of Capital
6.3. Globalised Fossil Capital and Cash-Crops Production
Chapter Seven: “The Year of the Terrible Murrain among the Cattle”, the Year of the Steam Cultivator (1863)
7.1. The Rinderpest
7.2. The Invention of the Steam Cultivator
7.3. “A Country Predestined for the Steam Plough”
7.4. Conclusion
Chapter Eight: The (Re)organisation of Power (1863-70)
8.1. Steam Monopoly
8.2. The Pasha, the Prince, and the Pashmuhandis
8.3. The Gin, the Plough, and the Pump
8.4. Conclusion: The Reorganisation of Power
Chapter Nine: The Chopping Axe Spring of Qau (1865)
9.1. The Murrain, the Discontent, and the Messiah
9.2. March 1865: The Qau Uprising
9.3. The Chopping Axe
9.4. Death and Vultures
9.5. The Prisoners, the Exiled
9.6. Conclusion
Chapter Ten: “Combustible Material of Every Kind”
10.1. The Viceroy at the Royal Agricultural Exhibition
10.2. The Lokombeel
10.3. The Forest, the Bagasse, the Soil
10.4. The Head-Schemioth Steam Engine
10.5. Burning Combustible Material of All Kinds
10.6. Burning More Coal, Always
10.7. Conclusion: How it Burned
A Fable: Capitalism and its ’Afarit
Chapter Eleven: Don’t You See, Pashmuhandis, That We Are Drowning?
11.1. ’Afarit, Industrialisation, Colonialism, and Global Trade
11.2. It Burns, it Explodes, it Flies, it Eats the Young
11.3. “A Devil is in Your Pump and Will Drown Us All”
Conclusion
Igniting the Steam Engine in Egypt
Three Peculiarities: The Contingencies of Egypt’s Energy Transition
Do You Not See That We Keep Drowning?Amr Khairy Ahmed is an Egyptian historian and scholar whose research focuses on the social and environmental history of energy, industrialization, and capitalism in the Middle East.
Egypt Ignited offers a gripping global history of how fossil capital—and the warming it unleashed—spread far beyond Europe. Beginning in the 1820s, Egypt became one of the first non-European countries to pursue steam-driven industrialization after Britain. This radically new account of 19th-century Egypt traces how fossil capital took root in the Nile Valley, entangling imperial ambition, forced dependency, debt, and colonialism. From European engineers and financiers to Pashas, peasants, and plantation workers, Khairy follows the human and environmental toll of industrial modernity—boilers exploding, oxen dying in polluted canals, rebels executed for resisting machines they believed were powered by underground demons demanding their children's futures.A sweeping story of empire, extraction, and resistance, this is a vital history of capitalism’s global spread—and the climate catastrophe it set in motion.Chapter One: Introduction
1.1. Things Ignited
1.2. This Book
1.3. Historicising the Capitalocene, Energy, and Technology: To Study All History Anew
1.4. Historical Materialism and Global Warming
1.5. Outline of the Book
Part I: The Frustrated Empire
Chapter Two: The Industrial Revolution That Never Happened (1820s-30s)
2.1. Ox Power, Man Power, Horse Power
2.2. 1820s: “Have You Been Able to Procure Coal? Have You Bored at All?”
2.3. Wind, Water, and Trees
2.4. Conclusion
Chapter Three: The Power Crisis (1838 – 48)33
3.1. In Syria’s Coal Mines, “Preoccupied with his Industrial Thoughts”
3.2. The Squeeze, and the Fightback
3.3. The Plague and the Chiflik
3.4. The Birth of the Private Estates/Cattle Murrain Combination
3.5. Murrain/Steam Technology Combination
3.6. Conclusion: “Coal! Coal! Coal! That Is the One Thing Needful For Me”
Chapter Four: The Sugar Factory, the Cornish Pump, the Mud Machine (1848 – 55)
4.1. What Pashmuhandis Eyth Did Not See
4.2. Early 1850s: Steam for White Sugar
4.3. Early 1850s: The Mud Machine, the Cornish Pump
4.4. Conclusion
Chapter Five: The “Want of Capital”… The Cotton Gin (1855-63)
5.1. Pre-boom Gins
5.2. The Cotton Boom…“the Want of Capital”
5.3. Conclusion: Steam Technology and Loans
Part II: Combustible Carbon
Chapter Six: The Age of Debt, Steam Engines, and Bankruptcy (1863 – 76)
6.1. Loans as Bridges
6.2. Luxemburg’s Second Argument: International Loans and the Accumulation of Capital
6.3. Globalised Fossil Capital and Cash-Crops Production
Chapter Seven: “The Year of the Terrible Murrain among the Cattle”, the Year of the Steam Cultivator (1863)
7.1. The Rinderpest
7.2. The Invention of the Steam Cultivator
7.3. “A Country Predestined for the Steam Plough”
7.4. Conclusion
Chapter Eight: The (Re)organisation of Power (1863-70)
8.1. Steam Monopoly
8.2. The Pasha, the Prince, and the Pashmuhandis
8.3. The Gin, the Plough, and the Pump
8.4. Conclusion: The Reorganisation of Power
Chapter Nine: The Chopping Axe Spring of Qau (1865)
9.1. The Murrain, the Discontent, and the Messiah
9.2. March 1865: The Qau Uprising
9.3. The Chopping Axe
9.4. Death and Vultures
9.5. The Prisoners, the Exiled
9.6. Conclusion
Chapter Ten: “Combustible Material of Every Kind”
10.1. The Viceroy at the Royal Agricultural Exhibition
10.2. The Lokombeel
10.3. The Forest, the Bagasse, the Soil
10.4. The Head-Schemioth Steam Engine
10.5. Burning Combustible Material of All Kinds
10.6. Burning More Coal, Always
10.7. Conclusion: How it Burned
A Fable: Capitalism and its ’Afarit
Chapter Eleven: Don’t You See, Pashmuhandis, That We Are Drowning?
11.1. ’Afarit, Industrialisation, Colonialism, and Global Trade
11.2. It Burns, it Explodes, it Flies, it Eats the Young
11.3. “A Devil is in Your Pump and Will Drown Us All”
Conclusion
Igniting the Steam Engine in Egypt
Three Peculiarities: The Contingencies of Egypt’s Energy Transition
Do You Not See That We Keep Drowning?Amr Khairy Ahmed is an Egyptian historian and scholar whose research focuses on the social and environmental history of energy, industrialization, and capitalism in the Middle East.
PUBLISHER:
Verso Books
ISBN-10:
1836740565
ISBN-13:
9781836740568
BINDING:
Paperback / softback
NUMBER OF PAGES:
336
BOOK DIMENSIONS:
6.0000(W) x 9.2000(H) x
AUDIENCE TYPE:
General/Adult
LANGUAGE:
English