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ID181050
Title ProperTrading Wheat for Books in the Cold War
Other Title Information Public Law 480 (Food for Peace) and Its Connection to Middle East Studies
LanguageENG
AuthorDegerald, Michael
Summary / Abstract (Note)The libraries at top private and public research universities in the United States hold some of the most comprehensive collections in the world for studying other regions and their modern histories. Yet how this came to be has been largely overlooked. This article unearths the history of the Public Law 480 Program, also known as Food For Peace or PL-480, and how it came to support the large-scale acquisition of Arabic books through a center opened for this purpose in Cairo, Egypt. The article explores the changes in US food exports, specifically wheat, and links these changes to PL-480, US foreign policy, and finally Arabic book acquisitions for US research libraries. By drawing on a variety of publicly available primary sources, as well as a series of interviews with the current and former directors of the Cairo acquisitions center, this article lays out the history of this unorthodox program and its outsized impact on area studies programs in the United States, with a specific focus on Middle East Studies.
`In' analytical NoteMiddle East Critique Vol. 30, No.3; 2021: p.245-264
Journal SourceMiddle East Critique Vol: 30 No 3
Key WordsEgypt ;  Middle East Studies ;  Cold War History ;  Critical Studies in library and information science ;  Food for Peace Program


 
 
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