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This book looks with hindsight at the Arab Spring and sheds light
on the debates it triggered within North African societies and the
alarming developments in women's rights. Although women played a
key role in the success of the uprisings that wiped out long ruling
oligarchies across the region, they remain excluded from
decision-making circles and the formal political and electoral
apparatus. Women's rights are written off constitution drafts, and
issues of gender equality are hardly addressed. The chapters that
compose this volume present research and reflections from different
perspectives to help the reader get a better picture of the
profound turmoil that beset this part of the so-called "Arab"
World. Adopting an interdisciplinary perspective, the contributors
discuss a host of questions related to women and gender in the Arab
world and address the broader question of why women's efforts and
momentum during the revolution did not seem to pay off the same way
they did for men. This book provides an assessment of the situation
from the inside. It is intended to help the general public as well
as the academic world comprehend the significance of what is going
on in this key part of the Islamic World.
This book looks with hindsight at the Arab Spring and sheds light
on the debates it triggered within North African societies and the
alarming developments in women's rights. Although women played a
key role in the success of the uprisings that wiped out long ruling
oligarchies across the region, they remain excluded from
decision-making circles and the formal political and electoral
apparatus. Women's rights are written off constitution drafts, and
issues of gender equality are hardly addressed. The chapters that
compose this volume present research and reflections from different
perspectives to help the reader get a better picture of the
profound turmoil that beset this part of the so-called "Arab"
World. Adopting an interdisciplinary perspective, the contributors
discuss a host of questions related to women and gender in the Arab
world and address the broader question of why women's efforts and
momentum during the revolution did not seem to pay off the same way
they did for men. This book provides an assessment of the situation
from the inside. It is intended to help the general public as well
as the academic world comprehend the significance of what is going
on in this key part of the Islamic World.
The papers in this volume include not only the traditional view of
what constitutes a minority but also any individual, or group
recalcitrant and reluctant, not to say resistant, to the
generalized lobotomy operated by the rampant uniformisation of
cultures around the world. For in the ruins of "the end of history"
and its context of violence and Manichean politics, any opposition
to the "general consensus" could be dismissed as anti-historical
and atavistic. The objective of the book is precisely to counter
such rhetoric and underscore the necessity of cultural diversity
and the right to difference. This book contains what can amount to
a critical response to the current context of confusion surrounding
the postmodern condition that arguably dominates most societies. It
stresses the issue of ethics not only in world politics but also in
literature and criticism which are the main focus here. In fact,
the interest in minority issues is in itself an ethical concern
that contributes to give substance to the idea that postmodernity
opens the gates for the long-suppressed identities and
sensibilities to emerge and demand recognition. This volume
intends, therefore, to contribute to the recent ethical turn that
seems to take place in scholarship worldwide. Operated mainly by
what is referred to as postcolonial studies this shift turned
literary criticism and cultural studies into the site where a sense
of literature can be envisioned that is not at all universalist, or
reflecting the hegemonic temptations of the new world order. It
seeks to present a patchwork of minor literatures, in the sense
that besides the "major" literatures/languages, there are myriads
of minor voices that express dissimilarity oftentimes under the
umbrella of those major languages and literatures themselves.
In the current postmodern reality where society is no longer viewed
as a totality but as a collection of individual interests, public
space both as a physical and symbolic space, has no determined
contours and the public sphere is likely to take new forms. Yet as
a crucial principle of democracy, public space will continue to
feed discussions as long as models of participatory democracy
represent the guarantor of good governance and the preservation of
the public good. Ranging from architecture, sociology, to literary
criticism and women and gender studies, the essays that compose
this collection have as a common denominator the idea of public
space as a vital aspect of public life in modern as well as in
developing and traditional societies. Placing themselves beyond the
relentless theoretical debates around the concept of public space,
the authors agree that no matter what forms it takes, public space
remains a fundamental aspect of even those societies that until
recently were viewed as hermetically sealed. What emerges from the
different perspectives included in this book is a general consensus
that the symbolic value of the physical public space is grounded in
the collective socio-political consciousness as the basis for a
general sense of civic action.
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