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Did as-Saʿidiyya really revolt? An ethnographic investigation

Did as-Saʿidiyya really revolt? An ethnographic investigation
Did as-Saʿidiyya really revolt? An ethnographic investigation
The purpose of this study is to investigate and inspect the causes that prevented the (marginalised and isolated) society of Saʿid from rebelling against President Mubarak’s authoritarian regime, as the North did. Here I seek to present different interpretation of as-Saʿidiyya’s attitudes toward the 2011 uprising away from the Manichean ‘glorification’ versus ‘ignominy’, or ‘celebrating’ v. ‘contempt’ narrative that dominated the study of the Saʿid and as-Saʿidiyya role in the 2011 Arab uprising. My research is based on interviews, participant observation and ethnographic investigation which articulates the behaviour of peasants as political actors in this time of turmoil, While most sociological and anthropological studies of revolutions concentrate on cities and urban areas, this article focuses on a small town, Madinat Al-Fikriyya, and village, Munshaʿiat Al-Fikriyya in Al-Minya governate in Upper Egypt. Therefore, to understand the role of as-Saʿidiyya in the 2011 uprising, the article suggests three conceptual changes to this convention. Firstly, by putting peasantry communities within socio-political and socio-economic contexts; secondly by concentrating on understanding the dynamics of state-society relations, and lastly, exploring the role of security establishment and levels of penetration into the society in order.
0026-3206
992-1029
Abozaid, Ahmed M.
87b3318c-1d62-4352-b0d3-e0c893a1f9fe
Abozaid, Ahmed M.
87b3318c-1d62-4352-b0d3-e0c893a1f9fe

Abozaid, Ahmed M. (2021) Did as-Saʿidiyya really revolt? An ethnographic investigation. Middle Eastern Studies, 57 (6), 992-1029. (doi:10.1080/00263206.2021.1902809).

Record type: Article

Abstract

The purpose of this study is to investigate and inspect the causes that prevented the (marginalised and isolated) society of Saʿid from rebelling against President Mubarak’s authoritarian regime, as the North did. Here I seek to present different interpretation of as-Saʿidiyya’s attitudes toward the 2011 uprising away from the Manichean ‘glorification’ versus ‘ignominy’, or ‘celebrating’ v. ‘contempt’ narrative that dominated the study of the Saʿid and as-Saʿidiyya role in the 2011 Arab uprising. My research is based on interviews, participant observation and ethnographic investigation which articulates the behaviour of peasants as political actors in this time of turmoil, While most sociological and anthropological studies of revolutions concentrate on cities and urban areas, this article focuses on a small town, Madinat Al-Fikriyya, and village, Munshaʿiat Al-Fikriyya in Al-Minya governate in Upper Egypt. Therefore, to understand the role of as-Saʿidiyya in the 2011 uprising, the article suggests three conceptual changes to this convention. Firstly, by putting peasantry communities within socio-political and socio-economic contexts; secondly by concentrating on understanding the dynamics of state-society relations, and lastly, exploring the role of security establishment and levels of penetration into the society in order.

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e-pub ahead of print date: 15 April 2021
Published date: 9 December 2021

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Local EPrints ID: 488553
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/488553
ISSN: 0026-3206
PURE UUID: 7b2f1d3d-13af-4fea-8c06-a2473a57f4aa

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Date deposited: 27 Mar 2024 17:31
Last modified: 27 Mar 2024 17:31

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Author: Ahmed M. Abozaid

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