5.0 out of 5 stars
Great Ethnography of Tourism, May 4 2012
By Clare A. Sammells "Anthropologist" - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Pyramids and Nightclubs: A Travel Ethnography of Arab and Western Imaginations of Egypt, from King Tut and a Colony of Atlantis to Rumors of Sex Orgies, Urban Legends about a Marauding Prince, and Blonde Belly Dancers (Paperback)
I use this book for my undergraduate Anthropology of Tourism class, and it was a great book both to read and to teach from. Wynn presents two very different types of tourists traveling to Egypt -- the western tourist fascinated by pyramids and ancient Egyptian culture, and the Arab tourist interested in modern Egyptian nightlife. Given the author's previous experience and contacts in Saudi Arabia, she is able to question common assumptions, such as the idea that Saudi tourists travel to get away from their social lives at home (as opposed to experience different aspects of those societies). Throughout, she considers how Egyptians interact with these different kinds of tourists through the lens of larger historical contexts of migration, colonialism, and global inequality. Overall, this is an interesting, well-written, and engaging text.
5.0 out of 5 stars
snapshots of Egypt's present, ghosts of her past, April 15 2009
By Virginia Greenbird "Virginia Greenbird" - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Pyramids and Nightclubs: A Travel Ethnography of Arab and Western Imaginations of Egypt, from King Tut and a Colony of Atlantis to Rumors of Sex Orgies, Urban Legends about a Marauding Prince, and Blonde Belly Dancers (Paperback)
As someone who visited Egypt for the first time only recently, determined to see the Pyramids and buy a few ornamental souvenirs, I found this to open up a much larger vista than I'd had of Egypt.
So I went to see a blonde belly dancer, and a brunette belly dancer, and guess what: I preferred the Pyramids. Reading "Pyramids and Nightclubs" may be the best predictor for any prospective visitor of which version of Egypt you'll prefer to visit.
I recommend the book not only for would-be tourists but for anyone who wants to sort through the myths of modern Egypt and its relation to the rest of the "Arab world."
1 of 2 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars
Enlightening, Sep 21 2008
By Mrs. Joyce Miller "Just Joyce" - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Pyramids and Nightclubs: A Travel Ethnography of Arab and Western Imaginations of Egypt, from King Tut and a Colony of Atlantis to Rumors of Sex Orgies, Urban Legends about a Marauding Prince, and Blonde Belly Dancers (Paperback)
Studying Egyptology for many years I find this book paints a different picture about the subject - politically as well as socially.
A must on anyone's bookshelf interested in Egypt, both ancient and modern.