Egyptian revolutions : conflict, repetition and identification

著者

    • Kabesh, Amal Treacher

書誌事項

Egyptian revolutions : conflict, repetition and identification

Amal Treacher Kabesh

Rowman & Littlefield International, c2017

  • : PB

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注記

Includes bibliographical references (p. 167-177) and index

内容説明・目次

内容説明

The socio-political context of Egypt is full of the affectual burdens of history. The revolutions of both 1952 and 2011 proclaimed that the oppressive, colonial past had been overthrown decisively. So why has the oppression perpetrated by previous regimes been repeated? What impact has this had on the lives of 'ordinary' citizens? Egyptian Revolutions looks at the impact of the current events in Egypt on citizens in relation to matters of belonging, identification and repetition. It contests the tendency within postcolonial theory to understand these events as resistance to Western imperialism and the positioning of activists as agents of sustainable change. Instead, it pays close attention to the continuities from the past and the contradictions at work in relation to identification, repetition and conflict. Combining postcolonial theory with a psychosocial studies framework it explores the complexities of inhabiting a society in a state of conflict and offers a careful analysis of current theories of gender, religion and secularism, agency, resistance and compliance, in a society riven with divisions and conflicts.

目次

1 Conflict, Repetition, Identification/ 2 Living with Perpetual Insecurity/ 3 The Intimacy of Subjection/ 4 Perpetual Repetition: Events, Narratives, Emotions/ 5 Female Agency: Struggling Against Constraint/ 6 Power, Domination, Struggle/ 7 The Essential Endeavour: Being Accountable / Bibliography/ Index

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