CHALLENGING COLONIALISM:
Bank Misr and Egyptian Industrialization;
1920-1941

by Eric Davis

Princeton, New Jersey: Princeton University Press, (1983).

First edition, first printing.

Handsomely bound, this quality book production has sturdy deep inner and outer hinges, taupe end-papers, acid-free paper, quality woven brown linen binding, sewn binding, yellow headband and tail-band, and clear, easy-on-the-eye Lonotron Bembo type.

A timeless economic/political international historical study of acclaimed renown, this work was re-issued in its entirety in a modern binding in 2016.

Davis examines the near East, Egypt, British colonialist, Arabs, world market forces, Egyptian class structure, the Egyptian Nationalist movement, and describes the first purely Arab bank and its place in Egypt between the two world wars.

He focuses on the political and economic forces at work in efforts to industrialize underdeveloped nations.

This reveals the causes of the rise and fall of one of the first multi-national corporations in the Third World and illuminates inter-Arab political and economic cooperation during the 1920s and 1930s.

Fine in brown linen with silver embossed titles to the spine; in a fine printed, taupe dust jacket.

Octavo; 232 pages; tables; footnotes; bibliography; index.

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