Representations of Ahmed Urabi: Hegemony, Imperialism, and the British Press, 1881–1882

Document Type

Article

Publication Date

2012

Publication Title

Victorian Periodicals Review

Volume

45

Issue

4

First Page

375

Keywords

Ahmed Urabi, British press, Anglo-Egyptian crisis, Egypt

Last Page

405

Abstract

Over the course of 1881–82, carefully constructed images of Ahmed Urabi became the face of the Anglo-Egyptian crisis in the British press. Images and descriptions of Urabi were portrayed to the British public as both the cause and symptom of the Egyptian people’s inability to govern themselves. Direct references to Urabi and his actions were framed by articles and illustrations that indirectly depicted Egypt and Egyptians in absolute opposition to British self-conceptions. The imagined Urabi constructed in the British press was central to contemporary British press accounts of events leading to the invasion of Egypt.

DOI

10.1353/vpr.2012.0035

Share

COinS