Hanan Hammad

Tuesday, February 22

4-6 PM

E51-095




Industrial Sexuality: Prostitution in al-Mahalla al-Kubra, Egypt, 1927-1949

Dealing with gender and sexuality as intimate aspects of the social 
transformation associated with the spread of modern industry in Egypt, this 
talk traces licensed and unlicensed prostitution in al-Mahalla since the 
establishment of the Misr Spinning and Weaving Company (MSMW) in al-Mahalla in 
1927, until prostitution was outlawed in Egypt in 1949. The establishment of 
the MSWC as the largest domestically-owned textile enterprise in Egypt set in 
motion unsettling dynamics which transformed the town's socio-economic life. 
Among these was the immigration of thousands of male and female peasants hired 
to work in the mill, proliferation of prostitution and venereal diseases, and 
exposure of private intimacy to public scrutiny and judgment.  On one hand, 
along with public discourses on morality and public health and the conditions 
of the working class, the state interfered and selectively criminalized 
particular sexual practices. On the other hand, people of the town continued to 
practice public prostitution and fight secret prostitution. In doing so, they 
and the prostitutes themselves were active shapers of their lives rather than 
mere subjects of the law and the state’s power.  Studying prostitution in 
al-Mahalla during this period of exceptionally rapid socio-economic change and 
population growth not only gives us a window on a particular type of illicit 
sexuality and public morality in a colonial context, it also hints as to gender 
and inter-communal relations on the margins of a local community, and how its 
society was transformed. I use prostitution in al-Mahalla in the first half of 
the 20th century to trace how a provincial community negotiated both an 
encroaching colonial state, and its puritanical nationalist discourses.


Hanan Hammad is assistant professor of history at Texas Christian University. 
In 2010-2011 she is the fellow of Europe in the Middle East – The Middle East 
in Europe at the Zentrum Moderner Orient, Berlin. She earned her Ph.D in Middle 
East History with a supporting field in Persian studies at the University of 
Texas at Austin in 2009. Currently, she is working on a book manuscript 
tentatively entitled “Mechanizing People: Industrialization, Sexuality, Gender, 
and Social Transformation in Modern Egypt”. Her publications include "Between 
Egyptian 'national purity' and 'Local Flexibility': Prostitution in al-Mahalla 
al-Kubra in the first half of the 20th century" forthcoming in Journal of 
Social History and " From Condemnation to Fascination: and the Iranian 
Revolution and Khomeini in the Egyptian Press” in Radical History Review. She 
holds a degree in Mass Communication and Journalism from Cairo University, and 
before coming to the world of academia she worked as a journalist in Egyptian, 
Kuwaiti and American newspapers.

                                                                                
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