Such disciplining forms of governance thereafter served as the primary mediator of these people’s relationships to the rest of society. “The people of Egypt,” in Timothy Mitchell’s words, “were made inmates of their own villages.”1 Mehmet ʿAli’s state and those of his successors built prisons, conscription camps, quarantine regimes, hospitals, schools, asylums, and police stations in ways unprecedented in Egyptian history.2 All of these institutions—which, of course, regularly faced resistance to their illusory efforts at control—were charged with managing living creatures deemed socially useless or economically unproductive. This process was first worked out in the field of human-animal relations.3 As countless animals came to be defined as no longer socially, economically, or politically productive, they were killed, caged, or physically removed from society. The nineteenth-century Egyptian state did much the same to its human population.