Endangered Economies

Endangered Economies

How the Neglect of Nature Threatens Our Prosperity

  • Autor: Heal, Geoffrey
  • Editor: Columbia University Press
  • ISBN: 9781478020721
  • eISBN Pdf: 9781478027638
  • Lugar de publicación:  Durham , Estados Unidos
  • Año de publicación digital: 2023
  • Mes: Noviembre
  • Páginas: 344
  • Idioma: Ingles
In Revolution Squared Atef Shahat Said examines the 2011 Egyptian Revolution to trace the expansive range of liberatory possibilities and containment at the heart of every revolution. Drawing on historical analysis and his own participation in the revolution, Said outlines the importance of Tahrir Square and other physical spaces as well as the role of social media and digital spaces. He develops the notion of lived contingency—the ways revolutionary actors practice and experience the revolution in terms of the actions they do or do not take—to show how Egyptians made sense of what was possible during the revolution. Said charts the lived contingencies of Egyptian revolutionaries from the decade prior to the revolution’s outbreak to its peak and the so-called transition to democracy to the 2013 military coup into the present. Contrary to retrospective accounts and counterrevolutionary thought, Said argues that the Egyptian Revolution was not doomed to defeat. Rather, he demonstrates that Egyptians did not fully grasp their immense clout and that limited reformist demands reduced the revolution’s potential for transformation.
  • Cover
  • Contents
  • Note on Transliteration
  • Acknowledgments
  • Introduction. Revolution as Lived Contingency
  • 1. Prelude to Revolutionary Possibilities: Tahrir and Political Protest in Egypt
  • 2. Peak of Revolutionary Possibilities: Squared I: How the Revolution Was “Bound” within Tahrir
  • 3. Sovereignty in the Street: Popular Committees, Revolutionary Ambivalence, and Unrealized Power
  • 4. The Two Souls of the Egyptian Revolution: Democratic Demands, Radical Strikes
  • 5. Waning Revolutionary Possibilities: Squared II: Counterrevolutionary Coercion and Elections without Democratization
  • 6. Square Zero: The State, Counterrevolutionary Paranoia, and the Withdrawal of Activists
  • Conclusion. Revolution as Experience
  • Appendix 1. Brief Timeline of the Egyptian Revolution, 2011–2018
  • Appendix 2. A Note on Positionality
  • Appendix 3. Notes on Methods, or How I Conducted Historical Ethnography of a Revolution
  • Appendix 4. Major Political Coalitions in Egypt, 2000–2010
  • Notes
  • References
  • Index
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    • I
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