For members of Cairo's upper classes, cosmopolitanism is a form
of social capital, deployed whenever they acquire or consume
transnational commodities, or goods that are linked in the popular
imagination to other, more ""modern"" places. In a series of
thickly described and carefully contextualized case studies--of
Arabic children's magazines, Pokemon, private schools and popular
films, coffee shops and fast-food restaurants--Mark Allen Peterson
describes the social practices that create class identities. He
traces these processes from childhood into adulthood, examining how
taste and style intersect with a changing educational system and
economic liberalization. Peterson reveals how uneasy many
cosmopolitan Cairenes are with their new global identities, and
describes their efforts to root themselves in the local through
religious, nationalist, or linguistic practices.
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