

Nezar AlSayyad and Heba Safey Eldeen, "Cinematic Cairo: Egyptian Urban Modernity from Reel to Real" (American U in Cairo Press, 2022)
Aug 7, 2025
In this enlightening discussion, experts Heba Safey Eldeen, an architecture graduate and manager of the House Egyptian Architecture, and Nezar AlSayyad, a UC Berkeley professor focused on urban history, explore the powerful interplay between cinema and Cairo's urban landscape. They delve into how films shape perceptions of identity and culture in Egypt, reflecting societal tensions and transformations from the early 20th century to post-revolutionary times. Their insights reveal how cinema serves as both a mirror and a tool for nation-building, reflecting complex themes of urban struggle and nostalgia.
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How The Book Began
- Nezar AlSayyad met Heba Safey Eldeen in Cairo around 2019 and proposed a collaborative project on cinema and the city.
- They recruited young researchers to form a team and pursue a multi-author study of Cinematic Cairo.
Adaptation Alters Perceived Reality
- Nezar AlSayyad argues novel-to-film adaptation necessarily changes realism because film is a visual medium rather than textual imagination.
- He contends Mahfouz's Cairo remains intensely real despite cinematic appropriation.
Houses Mirror Social Change
- Nezar AlSayyad shows how house layouts and meal rituals visually encode gender and generational power in Cairo films.
- He reads Mahfouz adaptations to trace shifts from patriarchal communal meals to fragmented, scattered households.