Unheard Voices of the Young Egyptian Brothers: Pathways of Activism after 2013
Drawing upon extensive fieldwork, this book unveils the Egyptian Muslim Brotherhood intra-dynamics by examining the emerging pathways of political disengagement and radicalization in the aftermath of 2013 Coup. It explores how the 2011 waves of protest and the 2013 military takeover of power – two contradictory phases, in terms of their implications for political Islam – shaped young members' perceptions towards Egyptian politics, violence and the role of Islamic political groups. This offers a key to understanding the ideological and strategic evolution of Islamists, in alignment with regional changes such as the rise of transnational jihadist groups and the fading of popular protest in the Arab region. The book relies on Social Movement Theory and contentious politics literature to develop a relational approach for analysing the positionalities of the young Brothers. This elucidates change within Islamic groups as a multi-layered, evolving phenomenon that cannot be attributed solely to either ideological or structural changes, but rather to manifold factors operating at different levels. It also rejects the prevailing binary classification of moderate versus radical activism when seeking to understand the effects of repression on the trajectories of Islamic movements' members.
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Unheard Voices of the Young Egyptian Brothers: Pathways of Activism after 2013
Drawing upon extensive fieldwork, this book unveils the Egyptian Muslim Brotherhood intra-dynamics by examining the emerging pathways of political disengagement and radicalization in the aftermath of 2013 Coup. It explores how the 2011 waves of protest and the 2013 military takeover of power – two contradictory phases, in terms of their implications for political Islam – shaped young members' perceptions towards Egyptian politics, violence and the role of Islamic political groups. This offers a key to understanding the ideological and strategic evolution of Islamists, in alignment with regional changes such as the rise of transnational jihadist groups and the fading of popular protest in the Arab region. The book relies on Social Movement Theory and contentious politics literature to develop a relational approach for analysing the positionalities of the young Brothers. This elucidates change within Islamic groups as a multi-layered, evolving phenomenon that cannot be attributed solely to either ideological or structural changes, but rather to manifold factors operating at different levels. It also rejects the prevailing binary classification of moderate versus radical activism when seeking to understand the effects of repression on the trajectories of Islamic movements' members.
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Unheard Voices of the Young Egyptian Brothers: Pathways of Activism after 2013

Unheard Voices of the Young Egyptian Brothers: Pathways of Activism after 2013

by Doha Abdelgawad
Unheard Voices of the Young Egyptian Brothers: Pathways of Activism after 2013

Unheard Voices of the Young Egyptian Brothers: Pathways of Activism after 2013

by Doha Abdelgawad

eBook

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Overview

Drawing upon extensive fieldwork, this book unveils the Egyptian Muslim Brotherhood intra-dynamics by examining the emerging pathways of political disengagement and radicalization in the aftermath of 2013 Coup. It explores how the 2011 waves of protest and the 2013 military takeover of power – two contradictory phases, in terms of their implications for political Islam – shaped young members' perceptions towards Egyptian politics, violence and the role of Islamic political groups. This offers a key to understanding the ideological and strategic evolution of Islamists, in alignment with regional changes such as the rise of transnational jihadist groups and the fading of popular protest in the Arab region. The book relies on Social Movement Theory and contentious politics literature to develop a relational approach for analysing the positionalities of the young Brothers. This elucidates change within Islamic groups as a multi-layered, evolving phenomenon that cannot be attributed solely to either ideological or structural changes, but rather to manifold factors operating at different levels. It also rejects the prevailing binary classification of moderate versus radical activism when seeking to understand the effects of repression on the trajectories of Islamic movements' members.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780755650507
Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing
Publication date: 09/19/2024
Series: Critical Studies on Islamism Series
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 232
File size: 500 KB

About the Author

Doha Abdelgawad is currently Teaching Fellow at the University of Leeds, UK. She previously taught at the University of Chester, UK and the Department of Economics and Political Science, Cairo University, Egypt.
Doha Abdelgawad is currently Teaching Fellow at the University of Leeds, UK. She previously taught at the University of Chester, UK and the Department of Economics and Political Science, Cairo University, Egypt.

Table of Contents

Note on Transliteration
Introduction

Chapter One
Debating Islamism: Changing Theoretical Perspectives
Chapter Two
A Multi Level Relational Approach
Chapter Three
The Muslim Brotherhood- State Interactions
Chapter Four
The Muslim Brotherhood Group Dynamics
Chapter Five
Not Anymore in Politics: Reconsidering Islamism
Chapter Six
After the Massacre: Two Fighting Wings
Chapter Seven
Unsupported Trajectory: Examining Violence
Conclusion
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