Children in the Archive: Migration and School Life in Turn-of-the-Century Egypt

Authors

  • Olga Verlato Cornell University Author

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.24847/v11i22024.380

Keywords:

Egypt, archive, student, school

Abstract

What happens when we approach children and youth as the producers of their own history? This article foregrounds the concrete traces left by children and young students in the historian’s archive in order to offer an exploratory investigation of how they participated in the multifaceted history of transnational and internal migration in late nineteenth- and early twentieth-century Egypt. I focus on children and young individuals who, on the one hand, belonged to migrant communities in Egypt and, on the other hand, produced narratives which spoke to the experience of transnational and internal migration. By examining school exams, letters, and petitions produced by pupils between the 1880s and the 1920s, I reconstruct how younger members of society engaged with various forms of parental, communal, and state authority and support as they moved across different social, legal, and spatial geographies.

Author Biography

  • Olga Verlato, Cornell University

    Olga Verlato is a Klarman Postdoctoral Fellow in Near Eastern Studies at Cornell University. Her scholarship explores the history of language politics, media, education, and migration in modern Egypt and the Mediterranean region. She has published on the history of education in modern Egypt, with a focus on Italian schools, Arabic script reform, and early-modern typography. She received her PhD in History and Middle Eastern and Islamic Studies in 2024 from New York University with a dissertation that explores the impact of multilingual practices and imperial, colonial, and nationalist language policies and ideology on the formation of modern Egypt as a monolingual state.

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Published

2024-08-06