
Cairo in Chicago: Cairo Street at the World’s Columbian Exposition of 1893
Marina Ali
István Ormos.
Institut Français d’Archéologie Orientale, 2021.
—Excerpt from Cairo in Chicago, by István Ormos
This book presents a detailed account of the Cairo Street exhibition in the 1893 World’s Fair in Chicago. Ormos, a professor of Semitic philology and Arabic, analyzes Cairo Street with a neutral lens, while previous academics solely viewed the exhibit as a reinforcement of imperialist, colonial and racist attitudes toward the East. Ormos paints a full picture of the exhibit with detailed explanations, from building construction and presentations of common activities in medieval Cairo to the belly dancers who were of North African origins. Even though Ormos highlights the positive cultural exchanges and learning opportunities Cairo Street offered, the often negative perceptions expressed in the contemporaneous letters, articles and photographs the author references make for a complex breakdown of an underrated cultural encounter.
You may also be interested in...

The Legacy of Egyptologist George Reisner—Our Book Review
When George Reisner died in 1942, he did so surrounded by ghosts—not just the pharaohs he’d unearthed but the stacks of unpublished notes that entombed his legacy.
Asma Khan’s Monsoon Cookbook Reclaims Taste of Home—Our Book Review
Known for her all-female kitchen at London’s Darjeeling Express, Asma Khan transforms her new cookbook into a memoir, steeped in nostalgia.