가야대학교 분성도서관

상단 글로벌/추가 메뉴

회원 로그인


자료검색

자료검색

상세정보

부가기능

The Arab Winter : a tragedy /

상세 프로파일

상세정보
자료유형E-Book
개인저자Feldman, Noah, 1970-, author.
서명/저자사항The Arab Winter :a tragedy /Noah Feldman.
발행사항Princeton, New Jersey : Princeton University Press, [2020]
형태사항1 online resource (xxiv, 192 pages)
소장본 주기Added to collection customer.56279.3
ISBN0691201447
9780691201443

서지주기Includes bibliographical references and index.
내용주기The People Want -- Tahrir and the Problem of Agency -- Syria and the Question of Fault -- The Islamic State as Utopia -- Tunisia and Political Responsibility -- Conclusion. Catharsis?
요약"Suddenly and unpredictably, non-violent mass demonstrations and protests erupted throughout the Arabic-speaking world in the spring of 2011, as large numbers of ordinary Arabs sought to take their political fate into their own hands and shape a better future for themselves. The optimism of their aspirations and the bravery of their efforts met with sympathy and excitement around the globe. For the first time, people in countries across North Africa and the Middle East were acting on their own, wresting control away from repressive governments and the great international powers that had long supported them. Yet as we all know, the electrifying events that began in Tunisia and that swept through Egypt, Syria, Iraq and elsewhere ultimately led to something much darker - except perhaps in the place where they began. Many long-time observers of the Middle East have arrived at a consensus about what happened to the Arab spring: it was doomed to fail. The Arab world, we are told, was unready for regime change in the direction of democracy. There is some variance among the purveyors of this consensus: some attribute the predestined failure and resulting horrors to a shared - and flawed - Arab political culture; others are inclined to blame Islam; and still others point the finger at the continued interference in the region of outside imperial powers (in particular, the United States). The purpose of Noah Feldman's new book is to rescue the Arab spring from the narrative of predestined failure. Feldman readily admits that in many ways the Arab spring ultimately made most people's lives worse than they were before. The ratio of success in the aftermath of the spring 2011 events has been atrocious. Yet it has not been zero. And even where these events took a turn for the horrifically worse, those outcomes were not inevitable. In place of the narrative of inevitability, Feldman tells a different story of the arc from spring to winter. His short book - ca 50,000 words - contains five chapters. In a first introductory chapter he analyzes the basic demands made by the Arab spring protesters (who were the people who took to the streets, what did they want, who was supposed to perform the overthrow of "the regime", and what was meant to replace it?). His main claim is that across the region demands for change were vague and general, not specific and concrete, and that - surprisingly - democracy went unmentioned. The result of this vagueness was an implicit invitation to military takeover. In chapter two, Feldman turns to Egypt and examines both key moments in the Egyptian drama: the January 2011 demonstrations in Tahrir Square in Cairo that led to the ousting of President Hosni Mubarak, and the June 2013 demonstrations in that same Square that encouraged the military to overthrow the recently-elected President and Muslim Brotherhood head, Mohamed Morsi. Feldman is of the view that the people took matters into their hands in both moments - in the first instance to remove a dictator, and in the second instance - sadly - to repudiate the country's nascent constitutional democracy. Chapter three moves to Syria and considers the thorny question of who was responsible for the disastrous civil war that followed the Arab spring there. Feldman's controversial argument is that responsibility lies not with the U.S. or other past imperial powers but with Syrians themselves. Chapter four addresses the Islamic State (ISIS, ISIL), claiming that although it was a dystopian political phenomenon when viewed from the outside it is best understood as a utopian, revolutionary movement that attained success locally and globally because it reflected its members' aspiration ot self-determining political action. In this way the Islamic State belongs squarely to the Arab spring moment. Lastly, in chapter five, Feldman describes the extraordinary success of Tunisia, the country where the Arab spring began. Tunisia, he claims, succeeded because its people and its leadership took political responsibility for the consequences of their actions, rather than seeking help from outside or hoping for internal forces to save them from themselves. The consequence was the compromise-driven creation of an original form of government: Islamic liberal democracy"--
일반주제명Arab Spring, 2010-
HISTORY / Middle East / General.
Politics and government.
주제명(지명)Arab countries -- Politics and government -- 21st century.Arab countries. -- fast
언어영어
기타형태 저록Print version:Feldman, Noah, 1970-The Arab WinterPrinceton, New Jersey : Princeton University Press, [2020]9780691194929
대출바로가기http://search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?direct=true&scope=site&db=nlebk&db=nlabk&AN=2296452

소장정보

  • 소장정보

인쇄 인쇄

메세지가 없습니다
No. 등록번호 청구기호 소장처 도서상태 반납예정일 예약 서비스 매체정보
1 WE00017446 909/.097492708312 가야대학교/전자책서버(컴퓨터서버)/ 대출가능 인쇄 이미지  

서평

  • 서평

태그

  • 태그

나의 태그

나의 태그 (0)

모든 이용자 태그

모든 이용자 태그 (0) 태그 목록형 보기 태그 구름형 보기
 

퀵메뉴

대출현황/연장
예약현황조회/취소
자료구입신청
상호대차
FAQ
교외접속
사서에게 물어보세요
메뉴추가
quickBottom

카피라이터

  • 개인정보보호방침
  • 이메일무단수집거부

김해캠퍼스 | 621-748 | 경남 김해시 삼계로 208 | TEL:055-330-1033 | FAX:055-330-1032
			Copyright 2012 by kaya university Bunsung library All rights reserved.