Rowman & Littlefield Publishers / Rowman & Littlefield International
Pages: 228
Trim: 6¼ x 9½
978-1-78348-448-5 • Hardback • April 2016 • $176.00 • (£137.00)
978-1-78348-449-2 • Paperback • March 2016 • $59.00 • (£45.00)
978-1-78348-450-8 • eBook • March 2016 • $56.00 • (£43.00)
Shabnam J. Holliday is a Lecturer in International Relations in the School of Government at Plymouth University. She is the author of Defining Iran: Politics of Resistance (2011), and is currently working on Gramsci’s ideas of subalternity and hegemony in relation to Iran.
Philip Leech is a Senior Fellow at the Institute for Government at Ottawa University in Canada (2014-17) and a Visiting Fellow at the Kenyon Institute in Jerusalem (2014-15). He has a PhD from Exeter Universities Institute for Arab and Islamic Studies (2012). He is the author of The State of Palestine: A Critical Analysis (2016).
Note on Transliteration / Acknowledgements / 1. Introduction, Shabnam J. Holliday and Philip Leech / 2. Divided we stand? The Heterogeneous Political Identities of Iran’s 2009-2010 Uprisings, Shabnam J. Holliday and Paola Rivetti / 3. The Spring in Sulaimani: Kurdish Protest and Political Identities, Nicole F. Watts / 4. Underlying Fragility: the absence of hegemony and popular demonstrations in the West Bank 2011-12, Philip Leech / 5. Israeli Grassroots Activism: Recent Waves of Protests, and Heterogeneous Political Identities, Giulia Daniele / 6. From Ba‘thist Nationalism to New Syrian Identities. How the Emerging Syrian Civil Society Tries to Define Itself Before, During and After the Popular Uprising, Lorenzo Trombetta / 7. Political identities and the Uprising in Yemen, Fernando Carvajal / 8. In Want of the People. Tahrir as a Revolutionary Reconstitution of the Egyptian National-Popular Subject, Brecht De Smet / 9. The Tunisian Uprising, Ennahdha, and the Revival of an Arab-Islamic Identity, Rory McCarthy / 10. Conclusion, Shabnam J. Holliday and Philip Leech / List of Contributors / Bibliography / Index
This volume draws out both the complexities and common themes in the dynamics of political activism and identity in uprisings across the Middle East and North Africa since 2009. Looking at non-Arab alongside ‘Arab’ instances, and focusing on the agency-structure question, the detailed case studies cohere into a fine-grained but conceptually compelling contribution to the literature.
— Gerd Nonneman, Professor of International Relations and Gulf Studies, Georgetown University
Political Identities and Popular Uprisings in the Middle East provides new insights regarding the roots of the Arab uprising, and offers valuable lessons to students of diplomacy in general, and to others interested in the manipulative American and European policies in the Middle East in particular.
— Mohamed Rabie, Professor of International Political Economy, Al Akhawayn University, Morocco
Against the backdrop of large-scale protests in the Middle East in recent years, this book brings together an original collection of essays on how political identities are constituted in contexts of mass mobilisation and widespread collective action. It offers rich and textured accounts of how competing identifications and contending visions of the political community and of the collectivity emerge through grassroots political action and through popular contestation of structures of government and dominant relations of power in the Middle East.
— Salwa Ismail, Professor of Politics with reference to the Middle East, SOAS University of London
At its core, this volume is interested in the “construction and reconstruction of political identities during protests or uprisings, as well as in the aftermath” … This emphasis on identity politics … gives rise to a rich discussion of the plurality and fluidity of identity. … The volume thus is unique in many respects. … The volume itself can be seen as an act of protest against Eurocentric accounts of the protests and uprisings across the Arab and non-Arab Middle East. … The volume makes a sophisticated contribution to our understanding of the so-called Arab Spring.
Parmida Esmaeilpour, Department of Political Science, University of British Columbia, Canada
— Perspectives on Terrorism