1st Edition

Crowds and Politics in North Africa Tunisia, Algeria and Libya

By Andrea Khalil Copyright 2014
142 Pages
by Routledge

142 Pages
by Routledge

142 Pages
by Routledge

This book  takes predominant crowd theory to task, questioning received ideas about ‘mob psychology’ that remain prevalent today. It is a synchronic study of crowds, crowd dynamics and the relationships of crowds to political power in Tunisia, Libya and Algeria (2011-2013) that has far reaching implications embedded in its thesis.  One central theme of the book is gender, providing an... Read more

Introduction: Looking at Crowds 1 Theorizing the Crowd 2 Tunisia: the Roots of Social Collectivity 3 Algeria: The Country of a Million Martyrs 4 Libya: The Paradox of the Political Crowd and the "State of the Masses"

Biography

Andrea Khalil is Associate Professor of Comparative Literature at Queens College, City University of New York. She has taught at the American University in Cairo (1999-2000), served as the Director of the Centre for Maghreb Studies in Tunis (2001-2002) and was Fulbright Scholar Tunisia (2012-2013). She is the author of The Arab Avant-Garde: Experiments in North African Art and Literature (2003) and the editor of North African Cinema in a Global Context: Through the Lens of Diaspora (2008).