1st Edition
From the 1919 Revolution to the 2011 Arab Spring A History of Three Egyptian Thawras Reconsidered
Revolutions in Egypt – A Theoretical Framework
1. The Conceptualization of the 1919, 1952 and 2011 Risings: Thawra or Revolution?
Shimon Shamir
2. The Burden of History
Shlomo Avineri
Egyptian Revolutions from Within: Politics, Society, Economy and Regional Role
3. Who Has Governed Egypt – Ruler, Regime, or State? Egypt’s Unrevolutionary 1971 Revolution
Nathan J. Brown
4. Historic Pathways in Two Revolutions: 1919 and 2011
James Whidden
5. Vertical vs. Horizontal: Egypt’s State-Religion Discourse Before and After the 2011 Uprising
Limor Lavie
6. The Lonely Minority? Assessing the Modern Story of Egypt’s Copts and their "Return to Tradition"
Heather J. Sharkey
7. Egypt: The Inevitable Consequences of Inconsistent Socioeconomic Policies
Onn Winckler
8. From Leader to Partner: Egypt’s Declining Role in the Arab System (1952-2020)
Elie Podeh
How Should a Revolution be Remembered? Hegemonic Collective Memory Versus Counter Collective Memories
9. State Efforts to Establish Museums for the 1952 Revolution in Egypt
Joyce van de Bildt-De Jong
10. The Jubilee Celebrations of Egypt’s 1952 Revolution and the Construction of Collective Memory
Alon Tam
11. Language, Humor, and Revolution in Contemporary Egypt
Gabriel M. Rosenbaum
12. Young Egyptians Conquer the Public Sphere of Taḥrīr Square, Reshaping Egyptian Collective Memory and Identity through Graffiti
Mira Tzoreff
Biography
Uzi Rabi is the Director of the Moshe Dayan Center for Middle Eastern and African Studies, Head of the Department of Middle Eastern and African History, and a senior researcher at the Center for Iranian Studies, all at Tel Aviv University. His research focuses on the modern history and evolution of states and societies in the Middle East, Iranian–Arab relations, oil and politics in the Middle East, and Sunni–Shi'i dynamics.
Mira Tzoreff is a Senior Lecturer at the Department of Middle East and African History and a Senior Researcher at the Moshe Dayan Center—both at Tel Aviv University. Her areas of research are the socio-cultural history of modern Egypt, women and gender in Arab and Islamic societies, and youth in the Middle East and North Africa.






