Seeking Bread and Fortune in Port Said
About the Author
From Our Blog
UC Press September Award Winners
Table of Contents
List of Illustrations
Acknowledgments
Note on Transliteration
Map of Cited Departure Points and Stepping Stones of Suez Canal Migrants
Introduction
1 • A Universal Meeting Point on the Isthmus of Suez
2 • Like a Beehive: Race and Gender on the Suez Worksites
3 • A Semilawless Borderland: The Presence of These People Could Bring Evil
4 • Entertainment in Port Said, a Sink of Immoral Filth
Conclusion: It Would Be Wonderful If It Were Not Unhappy
Postscript
Notes
Bibliography
Index
Reviews
"Well researched and superbly written."— Journal of European Economic History
"This deeply researched and elegantly written study brings into sustained conversation migration, borderlands, and water studies. Lucia Carminati bids us consider who really built the Suez Canal, how they did it, and what the historical consequences were for a host of social actors from near and far. Carminati advances provocative arguments that transform current paradigms of labor, mobility, technologies of imperialism, and much more. Seeking Bread and Fortune in Port Said is a tour de force that demonstrates in highly original fashion the productivity of transnational history as envisioned by a sophisticated scholar."—Julia Clancy-Smith, author of Mediterraneans: North Africa and Europe in an Age of Migration, c. 1800–1900
"In the best tradition of social history, Carminati weaves together strands from the lives of ordinary workers from around the Mediterranean who answered the call to build the Suez Canal and the new towns and cities servicing it in the isthmus—most notably Port Said. Superbly documented, astutely argued, and incredibly well-written, Seeking Bread and Fortune in Port Said gives us a new understanding of the international effort that went into developing the region."—Beth Baron, author of Egypt as a Woman: Nationalism, Gender, and Politics
"Drawing on extensive archival research, Carminati reanimates the bustling landscape of Port Said and the migrants who flocked there to build and service the Suez Canal. The vivid experiences she documents of everyday people working, hustling, brawling, and becoming immiserated reveal changing and complex patterns of mobility and illuminate a vital and fascinating urban history that took shape outside the region's major cities. A rich and innovative book that restores a human dimension to hydraulic infrastructure."—Nancy Reynolds, author of A City Consumed: Urban Commerce, the Cairo Fire, and the Politics of Decolonization in Egypt
"Some arteries are so important that they conceal the heart that pumps the lifeblood through them. This is the case with the Suez Canal, the boomtown of Port Said, and the people who built it. Seeking Bread and Fortune in Port Said brings the place to life and back to history through hundreds of micronarratives of these men and women, Egyptians and others, weaving them into a superb global urban history of migration."—On Barak, author of Powering Empire: How Coal Made the Middle East and Sparked Global Carbonization
Awards
- Lyman Book Award for World Maritime History 2023 2024, North American Society for Oceanic History
- UHA Award for Best Book in Urban History (excluding the U.S., Canada, and Europe) 2024 2024, Urban History Association