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192.168.6.56/handle/123456789/51553
Title: | Connected in Cairo |
Authors: | Allen Peterson, Mark Paul A. Susan Slyomovics Susan Slyomovics |
Keywords: | Consumption (Economics)—Egypt—Cairo |
Issue Date: | 2011 |
Publisher: | Indiana University |
Description: | Th ere is a scene in the brilliant egyptian comedy fi lm Irhab wal-Kabab (terrorism and barbecue) in which an old man on a crowded cairo bus, who has been griping about all the frustrations egyptians must put up with, is told by a young man that he sounds like a fi zzing coke bottle. Th e man retorts that even coke bottles explode once in a while when you shake them up enough. Th at’s what the egyptian revolution of 1 was all about. so what, he asks the younger generation on the bus, is their excuse? Many observers of the Middle east have asked the same question. egyptian apathy was a byword. Th en, on January 2, 2011, the coke bottle fi nally exploded. Protesters marched into tahrir (“liberty”) square in unprecedented numbers. although repeatedly forced out by police, they returned again and again, ultimately staking out a symbolic space in the center of cairo and declaring that it belonged to the people, not the state. aft er , nearly 00 deaths, and over 1,000 injuries from clashes with police, baltigiyya (hired thugs), and counter-protesters, President hosni Mubarak resigned, and the supreme council of the armed forces formed an interim government |
URI: | http://10.6.20.12:80/handle/123456789/51553 |
ISBN: | 978-0-253-22311-1 |
Appears in Collections: | African Studies |
Files in This Item:
File | Description | Size | Format | |
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18.pdf.pdf | 2.23 MB | Adobe PDF | View/Open |
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