ABSTRACT

Since the overthrow of President Mursi in mid-2013, Egypt has witnessed an authoritarian rollback and shrinking spaces for civil society. Nationalist discourses have villified popular protest and channelled pressure for reform into a state-centric model of governance. Despite this hostile environment for social mobilization, protest has persisted. Contested Legitimacies explores this resilience of contentious politics through a multimethod approach that is attuned to the physical and discursive interactions among key players in Egypt’s protest arena. Drawing from a unique archive of sources, it investigates the rise and fall of different coalitions of contenders, from the Tamarod uprising against Mursi, to the Anti-Coup resistance against the military coup, to the challenges posed by the Tiran and Sanafir island campaign to Al-Sisi's regime. It highlights the decisive impact of battles fought in a discursive arena on the conditions of possibility for street politics: In postrevolutionary Egypt, a contest over the meaning of political legitimacy cemented political polarization, limited social movements’ coalition choices, and ultimately paved the way for a restoration of autocracy.

chapter 1|29 pages

Introduction

Title
The lessons of the Arab Spring for the study of protest in Egypt
Size: 0.28 MB

chapter 2|25 pages

Conceptual Choices and Theoretical

Title
Eventful history, interaction dynamics, and discursive arenas
Size: 0.25 MB

chapter 3|20 pages

Brothers and Rebels

Title
Mursi's legitimacy crisis, popular grievances, and the Tamarod protest coalition
Size: 0.21 MB

chapter 4|44 pages

Coup and Anti-Coup

Title
Islamist resistance and the National Alliance in Support of Legitimacy
Size: 1.41 MB

chapter 5|56 pages

Myths and Martyrs

Title
The Rabaa al-Adawiya massacre as a critical juncture
Size: 1.27 MB

chapter 6|24 pages

New Sheriff in Town

Title
Nationalism and the return of autocracy
Size: 0.24 MB

chapter 7|58 pages

A Tale of Two Islands

Title
Cross-movement alliances, nationalist mobilization, and the Tiran and Sanafir island protests
Size: 0.99 MB

chapter 8|23 pages

Conclusion and Implications

Title
Prospects for popular resistance in a post-revolutionary Egypt
Size: 0.21 MB