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Power and Protest in Tunisia: Remembering Revolution, Rebellion and Collective Dissent, 1864 -2011

(Hardback)

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Publishing Details

Full Title:

Power and Protest in Tunisia: Remembering Revolution, Rebellion and Collective Dissent, 1864 -2011

Contributors:
ISBN:

9780755636884

Publisher:

Bloomsbury Publishing PLC

Imprint:

I.B. Tauris

Publication Date:

6th February 2025

Country:

United Kingdom

Classifications

Readership:

Tertiary Education

Fiction/Non-fiction:

Non Fiction

Other Subjects:

Middle Eastern history
Revolutions, uprisings, rebellions
Social groups: religious groups and communities
Political structures: democracy

Dewey:

322.409611

Physical Properties

Physical Format:

Hardback

Number of Pages:

224

Dimensions:

Width 156mm, Height 234mm

Description

When the young Tunisian street vendor, Muhammad Bou Azizi, set himself alight in December 2010, he ignited a movement that in three weeks toppled the twenty-three year old dictatorship of President Ben Ali. Tunisias 2011 uprising took experts by surprise. Few in the West looked to Tunisias history of dissent and rebellion as a way to understand the present moment. However, in the country itself, headlines read 2011 revives the memory of 1864. This is the first work in English to address the significance of Tunisias 1864 rebellion for understanding Tunisias 2011 experience, and its reverberation across the Arab world. Using a variety of sources - from state archives and scholarly monographs, to poetry festivals, theater productions, radio and TV programs - the book reveals a documented history of political manipulation and popular resistance to it. Power and Protest in Tunisia traces the battle for the memory of the original anti-tax, anti-centre rebellion of 1864 that brought Tunisias tribes into a fragile but year-long alliance with coastal town populations. It uniquely places the recent revolution in the context of past social struggles emerging from the same interior regions. The book demonstrates how and why various regimes used the 1864 revolt to justify political agendas across the longue dure, from the liberal reform era of the beys (Ottoman provincial governors) to the postcolonial present. Successive regimes have used this history to instill fear and suppress dissent, but this book shows that popular memory has preserved the event as a powerful symbolic example of collective mobilization against injustice and corruptionone that nearly toppled a dynasty.

Author Bio

Silvia Marsans-Sakly is Assistant Professor of History and the Islamic World at Fairfield University in the U.S. She received her PhD in Middle Eastern Studies and History from New York University. She has published various peer reviewed articles and book chapters and has won numerous grants and awards including the Martin Luther King, Jr. Vision Award and the National Endowment for the Humanities Fellowship.

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