Kumar, Shanti2010-12-032010-12-032017-05-112010-12-032010-12-032017-05-112010-08August 201http://hdl.handle.net/2152/ETD-UT-2010-08-1631textThis dissertation is about the production of national identity in the transnational age. Focusing on the specific example of Egyptian television, this dissertation argues that new production imperatives, mainly in satellite television and internet, have changed the way that television is produced in the Arabic speaking Middle East, most significantly away from direct state control. The changes in production accompany changes in distribution and consumption of electronic media and are significantly rewriting the ways that shared cultural identities in the Middle East, including nationalism, religious, and other significant identities, are produced, consumed and replicated. This dissertation approaches these topics by relating two specific televisual texts, the Ramadan serials Malek Farouq and Gamal Abdel Nasser, to larger changes in Arab and Egyptian television production.application/pdfengEgyptEgyptian mediaKing FarouqGamal Abdel NasserTelevisionNational identityGlobalizationTransnational televisionArabic televisionSatellite broadcastingCultural identityMedia and IslamMBCEgypt is mother of the world : transnational television and national identitythesis2010-12-03