List of magazines in Egypt
The history of magazines in Egypt is long, dating back to the 1890s.[1] The earliest magazines included women's magazines[1] as well as those published in Turkish from 1828 to 1947.[2] In 1919 there were nearly more than thirty women's magazines in the country.[3] The first children's magazine was published in 1893.[4] The number of the magazines in the period 1828–1929 was 481.[5]
In 2014 the magazine market in the country was described as one of the lower-growth, smaller-scale markets.[6]
The following is an incomplete list of current and defunct magazines published in Egypt. They may be published in Arabic or in other languages.
A
- Abu Naddara
- Adab wa Naqd
- Ad-Diya
- Al-Ahali
- Al Ahram Al Arabi
- Al Ahram Al Iktisadi
- Al Ahram Al Riyadi
- Al Ahram Weekly
- Akhbar Al-Adab
- Akher Saa
- Al Alam
- Al Arghul
- Anis Al-Jalis
- Apollo
- Arab Observer
- Arek Monthly
- Arev Monthly
- Ar-Rawi
- Arrissalah
- Artemis
- Al Arus
- Al Arusa[7]
- L'Aurore
- Az-Zuhur
B
- Baba Sadiq
- Al-Balagh al-Usbuʿi
- Al Bayan
- Bint Al Nil
- Business Today Egypt
C
- Cairo 360
- Cairo Times[8]
- Cairo West Magazine
D
- Al Dawa
- Don Quichotte
E
- Egypt Today
- L'Égyptienne
- El-Shai.com
F
- Al Fajr
- Al Fajr Al Jadid
- Al Fatat
- Fatat al-Sharq
- Al Fath
- La Femme Nouvelle
- Al Fukaha
G
H
- Hawaa
- Al Hilal
- HR Revolution Middle East[9][10]
I
- Ibdaa
- İctihat
- Identity
- Israël
J
- Al-Jamia
- Al Jamila[7]
K
- Kanun-i Esasi
- Al Kashkul
- Al-Katib al-misri
- Al Kawakib[7]
- Kull shay
L
- Al Lataif
- Lotus
- Lounge
M
- Magazette
- Al Majalla
- Majallat Al Azhar
- Al Majalla Al Jadida
- Al Manar
- Al-Maʿrifa
- Al-Muqtataf
- Al-Musawar
N
O
- October
- Omdurman
R
- Rawdat Al Madaris
- Ar-Rawi
- Rose al-Yūsuf
S
- Sahifat Dar al-Ulum
- Al Siyassa Al Dawliya
- Al Siyassa Al Musawwara
- Al Siyasa Al Usbuiya
- As-Sufūr
T
U
W
Z
See also
References
- ^ a b Samir Ibrahim Hassan (2006). "Women and Society: Integrating Women's Perspective" (PDF). FAFO. Archived from the original (PDF) on 11 November 2009. Retrieved 29 September 2013.
- ^ Ekmeleddin İhsanoğlu (2012). "The Turkish Press in Egypt". The Turks in Egypt and their Cultural Legacy. Cairo University Press. pp. 243–296. doi:10.5743/cairo/9789774163975.003.0011. ISBN 9789774163975.
- ^ Beth Baron (July 1989). "Unveiling in Early Twentieth Century Egypt: Practical and Symbolic Considerations". Middle Eastern Studies. 25 (3): 371. doi:10.1080/00263208908700787. JSTOR 4283318.
- ^ Rania Khallaf (10–16 January 2002). "Freeing the imagination". Al Ahram Weekly (568). Archived from the original on 11 August 2013.
- ^ Ziad Adel Fahmy (2007). Popularizing Egyptian Nationalism: Colloquial Culture and Media Capitalism, 1870-1919 (PhD thesis). University of Arizona. p. 66. hdl:10150/195746.
- ^ "Emerging middle classes in large-scale markets such as China and Brazil" (PDF). PWC. 2014. Retrieved 6 August 2015.
- ^ a b c Lucie Ryzova (Fall 2004). ""I am a Whore but I will be a Good Mother": On the Production and Consumption of the Female Body in Modern Egypt". The Arab Studies Journal. 12/13 (2/1): 80–122. JSTOR 27933910.
- ^ "Egypt's only independent English-language news magazine". cairotimes.com. Retrieved 23 August 2023.
- ^ "Interview With HR Revolution Middle-East Magazine's Founder". democracychronicles.org. Retrieved 12 September 2023.
- ^ "HR Revolution Middle East Magazine, Media Partner, atd Middle East Conference, Abu Dhabi". Informa Connect. Informa Connect. 12 September 2023. Retrieved 12 September 2023.
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