Entangled Education: Foreign and Local Schools in Ottoman Syria and Mandate Lebanon (19th-20th centuries)

12.01.2016, Buchvorstellung und Diskussion, OI Beirut

Late Ottoman Syria and Mandate Lebanon were characterized by an exceptionally dense concentration of diverse educational institutions. Research on education in Bilad al-Sham during the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries has until now focused on individual institutions or movements. The latest publication in the Orient-Institut Beirut’s Beiruter Texte und Studien series, published by the Orient-Institut Beirut (OIB), Entangled Education: Foreign and Local Schools in Ottoman Syria and Mandate Lebanon (19-20th Centuries), sheds new light on the established narrative part of the by presenting twelve innovative studies of local and foreign schools.

Co-edited by Julia Hauser, Christine B. Lindner and Esther Möller and resulting from an international workshop held at the Orient-Institut Beirut in April 2012, this volume shows the entanglements of individuals, concepts and practices. Situated within the field of transnational history, the chapters of this volume illuminate the manifold conversations that entwined students, teachers and the public in debates over how to create a modern Arab society and the role of education within.

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