Óskáldað efni
'The people want' – thus began the slogans chanted by millions of protesters in 2011 in what was dubbed the 'Arab Spring'. While the protests revealed a long-suppressed craving for democracy, they also laid bare a deep structural crisis. In this landmark work, Middle East analyst Gilbert Achcar examines the socio-economic roots and political dynamics of the regional upheaval. He assesses the peculiarities of the region's states and regimes, and sheds light on the movements that use Islam as a political banner. Achcar argues that the Arab Spring was but the beginning of a long-term revolutionary process – a perspective confirmed by a second wave of uprisings in 2019 – and outlines the requirements for a solution to the crisis. This new edition features a preface drawing a balance sheet of the upheaval's first decade.
'A detailed and searching account of the Arab Spring'-- Malise Ruthven, New York Review of Books 'The most careful, insightful, and erudite study to date of the Arab uprising.' --Kevin Anderson (University of California, Santa Barbara), Marx and Philosophy Review of Books 'A detailed and searching account of the Arab Spring'--'Achcar's precise and illuminating analyses contrast with the usual discourses on the Arab Spring.'-- Henry Laurens (Collège de France), L'Orient Littéraire 'A thoughtful and acute analysis … Jargon-free, clear, and a model of marrying theory to empirical material.'-- Laleh Khalili (Queen Mary, University of London), Middle East in London '[This book] extends an invitation to the reader to leave a hall of mirrors that often guides explanations of the uprisings … historical events and conceptual constructs start to take a completely different shape.'-- Maha Abdelrahman (University of Cambridge), Jadaliyya
© 2022 Saqi Books (Rafbók): 9780863568329
Þýðandi: G. M. Goshgarian
Útgáfudagur
Rafbók: 31 mars 2022
Óskáldað efni
'The people want' – thus began the slogans chanted by millions of protesters in 2011 in what was dubbed the 'Arab Spring'. While the protests revealed a long-suppressed craving for democracy, they also laid bare a deep structural crisis. In this landmark work, Middle East analyst Gilbert Achcar examines the socio-economic roots and political dynamics of the regional upheaval. He assesses the peculiarities of the region's states and regimes, and sheds light on the movements that use Islam as a political banner. Achcar argues that the Arab Spring was but the beginning of a long-term revolutionary process – a perspective confirmed by a second wave of uprisings in 2019 – and outlines the requirements for a solution to the crisis. This new edition features a preface drawing a balance sheet of the upheaval's first decade.
'A detailed and searching account of the Arab Spring'-- Malise Ruthven, New York Review of Books 'The most careful, insightful, and erudite study to date of the Arab uprising.' --Kevin Anderson (University of California, Santa Barbara), Marx and Philosophy Review of Books 'A detailed and searching account of the Arab Spring'--'Achcar's precise and illuminating analyses contrast with the usual discourses on the Arab Spring.'-- Henry Laurens (Collège de France), L'Orient Littéraire 'A thoughtful and acute analysis … Jargon-free, clear, and a model of marrying theory to empirical material.'-- Laleh Khalili (Queen Mary, University of London), Middle East in London '[This book] extends an invitation to the reader to leave a hall of mirrors that often guides explanations of the uprisings … historical events and conceptual constructs start to take a completely different shape.'-- Maha Abdelrahman (University of Cambridge), Jadaliyya
© 2022 Saqi Books (Rafbók): 9780863568329
Þýðandi: G. M. Goshgarian
Útgáfudagur
Rafbók: 31 mars 2022
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