Category: Headline

Egypt: After the Revolution 1

Egypt: After the Revolution

What direction will Egypt be going in the time coming? Anthropologist Samuli Schielke is once again in Egypt and talked to several people and sees contradictory developments that were already going on but that are now partly magnified and partly transformed: the reintroduction of capitalism with a major social impact, the wave of a religious conservatism that was depoliticised in the past but is now becoming openly political in the aftermath of the protests and is also part of the neoliberal system of governance. Other major points pertain to the difficult relationship between ordinary people and the state, the crisis of patriarchal authority and people claiming their voice. Interestingly Schielke also shows how revolution is an emotional state and endeavour.

Paradoxes of Arab Refo-lutions 1

Paradoxes of Arab Refo-lutions

According to Asef Bayat, if revolutions are about intense struggle for a profound change, then any revolution should expect a counterrevolution of subtle or blatant forms. The question is not if the threat of counter-revolution is to be expected; the question rather is if the ‘revolutions’ are revolutionary enough to offset the perils of restoration. It seems that the Arab revolutions remain particularly vulnerable precisely because of their distinct peculiarity—their structural anomaly expressed in the paradoxical trajectory of political change.

Tunisia: from paradise to hell and back? 1

Tunisia: from paradise to hell and back?

Miriam Gazzah reflects on the current situation in Tunisia. Work and freedom of speech and expression, that is all that Tunisian youth want. It is a simple request. Based upon her own impressions and those of her father Gazzah makes clear that these wishes are not easily achieved for a country where more than half of the population consists of people under 25 years old. Tunisia’s new government will hopefully find a way to give new impulses to the economy, with help of Europe and the United States. But most importantly: tourists must come back to Tunisia as soon as possible.

De Marokkaanse Uitzondering? 2

De Marokkaanse Uitzondering?

De Arabische wereld schudt op haar grondvesten, de ene na de andere bevolkingsgroep komt in opstand tegen totalitaire regimes die hun onderdanen jaren lang onderdrukten. Vandaag is in Marokko een geplande grote demonstratie, maar toch lijkt het protest daar voorlopig weinig voet aan de grond te krijgen. Waarom hebben de gebeurtenissen in Tunesië en Egypte in Marokko, (nog) niet dezelfde reacties als in andere landen in de Arabische wereld teweeg gebracht?

Egypt's Revolution 2.0: The Facebook Factor 4

Egypt's Revolution 2.0: The Facebook Factor

The call for a Day of Rage on January 25, 2011 that ignited the Egyptian revolution originated from a Facebook page. Many have since asked: Is this a “Facebook Revolution?” According to Linda Herrera it is high time to put this question to rest and insist that political and social movements belong to people and not to communication tools and technologies. Facebook, like cell phones, the internet, and twitter, do not have agency, a moral universe, and are not predisposed to any particular ideological or political orientation. They are what people make of them.

"Now, it's gonna be a long one" – some first conclusions from the Egyptian revolution 3

"Now, it's gonna be a long one" – some first conclusions from the Egyptian revolution

Anthropologist Samuli Schielke was present at the protest on Tahrir Square and maintained a diary. In this blogpost he offers some pre-liminary conclusions based upon his experiences, observations and talks. Schielke makes clear that the protests have a strikingly festive aspect. It is not just a protest against an oppressive regime and a demand for freedom. In itself, it is freedom. It is a real, actual, lived moment of the freedom and dignity that the pro-democracy movement demand. A revolution however also requires persistence.

Two Faces of Revolution 8

Two Faces of Revolution

Two young men have played a major role in igniting the popular uprisings in Tunisia and Egypt: Mohammed Bouazizi and Khaled Said. According to Linda Herrera their evocative if tragic deaths speak reams about the erosion of rights and accountability under decades of corrupt dictatorship, about the rabid assault on people’s dignity. They remind us of the desperate need to restore a political order that is just and an economic order that is fair.

Closing the years 2009-2010 3

Closing the years 2009-2010

Because I don’t exactly know anymore when I started my own website, both the years 2009 and 2010 have been labelled as celebrating 10 years of blogging. In the last two years I tried to re-direct this site into more like a public anthropology website. A process that started in 2009 with the post Public Anthropology – 10 years from Researchpages to Closer (1999/2000-2009/2010). In this post I review the last two years and give an update on the recent publications.