In 1903, the Islamic reformist Muḥammad ʿAbduh (1849-1905), the English philosopher Herbert Spencer (1820-1903) and the English writer Wilfrid Scawen Blunt (1840-1922) met in Spencer’s home in Brighton. This article focuses on the history of the various tellings of this encounter that brought together three intellectuals from a globalizing and colonial world. It shows that the various renditions were creative negotiations of the encounter’s meaning across times, places and languages in the twentieth century. Specifically, this article’s comparison of the content, form and role of the accounts in Rashīd Riḍā’s Al-Manār (1915 and 1922), Blunt’s My Diaries (1920), Riḍā’s biography of ʿAbduh (the Tārīkh, 1931) and ʿImārah’s collection of ʿAbduh...
The ideas of the well-known reformist Sheikh Muḥammad Rashīd Riḍā (1865-1935) in his journal Al-Manā...
By the mid-19th century, 20-40,000 Indian men and women of all classes had traveled to Britain. All ...
[The Self covered in this article is the German travellers-be they ethnographers, explorers, scien...
By the 1880s, Wilfrid Scawen Blunt had become ‘the avatar for anti-imperial causes’ and an active fo...
The British invasion and occupation of Egypt in 1882 has long been a subject of interest for British...
This article analyzes the connections among several queer colonial journeys in the nineteenth and tw...
The philosopher Herbert Spencer (1820-1903) is little remembered today, but in the late nineteenth c...
This article provides the first significant scholarly treatment of “The Conference on Some Living Re...
Despite various attempts by literary theorists and historians to find more integrative ways of study...
Wilfrid Scawen Blunt (1840-1922) was a member of the landed aristocracy well connected with the inne...
This paper explores narratological techniques of counter-colonial ideas in the travel narrative of S...
Lady Mary Wortley Montagu, a British aristocrat sojourning across Europe in the 18th cen-tury, conti...
This book investigates the accounts of six European non-Muslims who managed to secretly visit the ci...
No doubt that the present fluctuating relation between Islam and the West is, and has always been, c...
Wilfrid Scawen Blunt (1840-1922) was one of the most interesting, colourful writers of Victorian En...
The ideas of the well-known reformist Sheikh Muḥammad Rashīd Riḍā (1865-1935) in his journal Al-Manā...
By the mid-19th century, 20-40,000 Indian men and women of all classes had traveled to Britain. All ...
[The Self covered in this article is the German travellers-be they ethnographers, explorers, scien...
By the 1880s, Wilfrid Scawen Blunt had become ‘the avatar for anti-imperial causes’ and an active fo...
The British invasion and occupation of Egypt in 1882 has long been a subject of interest for British...
This article analyzes the connections among several queer colonial journeys in the nineteenth and tw...
The philosopher Herbert Spencer (1820-1903) is little remembered today, but in the late nineteenth c...
This article provides the first significant scholarly treatment of “The Conference on Some Living Re...
Despite various attempts by literary theorists and historians to find more integrative ways of study...
Wilfrid Scawen Blunt (1840-1922) was a member of the landed aristocracy well connected with the inne...
This paper explores narratological techniques of counter-colonial ideas in the travel narrative of S...
Lady Mary Wortley Montagu, a British aristocrat sojourning across Europe in the 18th cen-tury, conti...
This book investigates the accounts of six European non-Muslims who managed to secretly visit the ci...
No doubt that the present fluctuating relation between Islam and the West is, and has always been, c...
Wilfrid Scawen Blunt (1840-1922) was one of the most interesting, colourful writers of Victorian En...
The ideas of the well-known reformist Sheikh Muḥammad Rashīd Riḍā (1865-1935) in his journal Al-Manā...
By the mid-19th century, 20-40,000 Indian men and women of all classes had traveled to Britain. All ...
[The Self covered in this article is the German travellers-be they ethnographers, explorers, scien...