In the Middle East, and in Egypt in particular, there has always
been a tendency to accord complete supremacy to the authority and
might of the state, and to see "society" as a separate, powerless
entity. However, after the uprising of 2011, this assumption was
turned on its head. And it is the wide range of political activity
beyond the remit of the official state where Wanda Krause locates a
dynamic potential for political change from the bottom up. She
looks in particular at the influential role of women's private
voluntary organizations in Egypt in shaping concepts of civil
society and democracy. Exploring both secular and "Islamist"
organizations, she offers a steadfast critique of the view that
Islamic women activists are insignificant,"'backward," or
"uncivil." Krause's examination of women activists in Egypt today
is vital for those interested in Middle East and Gender Studies, as
well as those researching the wider issues of civil society and
democratization.
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