How Often Must One Break with a Regime to Precipitate Its End? An Interpellation to Post-Mubārak Egypt
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.5433/2176-6665.2023v28n2e47732Keywords:
rupture, despotism, colonial subjectivations, post-revolution, EgiptAbstract
How many times and in what unusual ways must a civilization break with the same military regime before an end is imposed on it? Such questioning about ruptures or simple discontinuities between political regimes is posed vis-à-vis three synthetic pictures of an interregnum ranging from modern colonial Egyptian history to the period known as baᶜd al-Thaūra (post-Revolution), which begins with the end of Ḥusnī Mubārak’s military rule, in 2011. The article starts from the understanding that reviewing Egypt’s recent history helps us understand that in order to begin speculating on scales and measures of ruptures or coexistences with continuities of despotic cultures, one must first address the turning points in the forms of restitution and subtraction of subjects and colonial subjectivations of a nation-state.
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Grant numbers 88882.317427/2019-01