<p><b>A comparative study of iconographic and fictional representations of department stores in France and Egypt as sites of imperial and Mediterranean cultural memory from 1869 to the present.</b></p><p><b>Shortlisted for the 2025 First Book Prize presented by the Modernist Studies Association</b></p><p><b>Honorable Mention for the 2025 René Wellek Prize presented by the American Comparative Literature Association</b></p><p>This book examines what Amr Kamal calls the phenomenon of <i>emporialism</i> or the convergence between the spaces and imaginaries of empires and emporia in the context of a modern Mediterranean divided among the British French and Ottoman empires. By emporia Kamal refers to the commercial network of nineteenth-century department stores which gained prominence after the Suez Canal project. Taking as a focal point French and Egyptian department stores the author examines emporialism as a set of phenomenological experiences discursive and social praxes and mechanisms of control and resistance born from the intersection of modernity colonialism and mass consumption. Drawing on archival evidence Kamal reads iconographic and literary representations of emporia in English French Arabic and Hebrew from the nineteenth century to the present addressing works by Émile Zola Huda Shaarawi Jacqueline Kahanoff and others. Emporialism Kamal argues served to rewrite the history of the Mediterranean to reinvent national belonging and to interrogate issues of modernity and social justice.</p>
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