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Ed Webb

Ten Theses on Revolutions by Mohammed A. Bamyeh - 0 views

  • As it torments what before it had appeared as solid, immovable authority, a revolution also contests established knowledge.
  • a longing is not an act, and a general condition of unhappiness does not predict any specific action
  • If revolutions could be predicted, they would never happen: the science that does this work of prediction would immediately become the science of government. The fact that regimes are always on the lookout for opposition does not mean that they know in what way they will meet their end.
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  • just like regimes, the revolutionary explosion often catches the committed revolutionary by surprise: the teeming masses rose up earlier or later than expected, they moved not by the book and not according to plan, but as a detonation in the normal flow of time.
  • In 2011, there was no plan for revolution, anywhere, when a whole world region went up in flames after a poor street vendor in a marginal town in Tunisia self-immolated. Nor was there a plan for the great Palestinian intifada of 1987, when a street collision resulted in the death of four Palestinian workers. While both spectacular revolts that followed could be explained by years of insufferable indignities preceding them, there was no specific reason that a specific indignity on a specific day would unsettle the mighty repressive norm that, by then, had seemed everlasting.
  • Like the 2011 uprisings, the 1987 intifada erupted when there was no hope, no resources at hand to encourage hope, and at a point when rational, realistic minds posited hopelessness as the solid structure of the world.
  • every revolution gives birth to its own intellectuals, especially where the existing intellectuals refuse to acknowledge its profound originality, and stick to their old system of thought that had predicted either the absence of revolution, or one of a very different character than what came to be. Thus every revolution brings its own knowledge with it; it does not follow an established science.
  • What comes out in the immediate aftermath of every revolution is not necessarily a new or better system. Before anything else, what comes out is an educational experience, even when a revolution appears to have failed.
  • Everyone is then encouraged to forget the revolution, to turn attention to what should come next, before they could reflect on how they had managed to unleash a revolution to begin with.
  • Revolutions are therefore not simply events in time. The last thing they change is the political system, the first thing they change is the culture.
  • asking questions that yesterday were not even known to be questions
  • Rare are the revolutions that do not result in books written about them; poems composed in their honor; art that provides them with continuing presence; commemoration that remind of their best hopes; interpretations that establish them as inescapable heritage
  • the less visible, but more pervasive social traces (ordinary dialogues, new friendships, ongoing thoughts), that revolutions leave behind in their aftermath.
  • a revolution proceeds as a general invitation to creativity, then lives on as emergent culture--thought, questions, arguments. As it gains expressive maturity and a self-bestowed right to presence, this culture, diverse as it may be, marks the onset of the next round of social transformation
  • The psychology of the moment is one of elevated spirit, extraordinary time, unusual solidarity, will to sacrifice, interruption of norms, license for originality that may appear unlimited. The aftermath of that moment is typically one of Realpolitik, rational calculations, instrumental thought, power struggles, more ordinary politics. And precisely in that re-emergence of quotidian time there will be much pressure to forget the revolution, long before the counter-revolution has performed any of its tricks.
  • What we call “education” flowing out of a revolutionary moment is an education that begins from the senses, is felt in the body as energy, in the mind as epiphany, in the soul as “the people”—an abstraction that for a moment becomes concrete, because it has become the person.
  • The move away from exploring the source and promise of such novelty, and back into the more ordinary, more familiar psychology of “realism,” encourages thinking of the revolutionary act as no more than means to ends.
  • Ordinarily, epistemological imperialism tends to be a practice of an established mighty authority that, by virtue of its longevity or scope of its power, has become too confident of itself. But epistemological imperialism may also be a practice of opposition that, from long life under a certain power, could only think of revolution as an expression of a right to the same power.
  • To their participants, a revolutionary gathering exceeds any single demand: it addresses a felt need for a total social renewal. The mission then seems greater than simply replacing one ruler by another. At that moment, the ordinary person is in the revolution precisely because that is where she is not being ruled. There, she finally discovers what seems like an inborn, organic capacity to act as a sovereign agent: without instructions, without authority, even without a guiding tradition.
  • This total spiritual condition suggests to everyone involved that the revolution is greater than any particularism. The consciousness of totality makes its appearance as a sudden revelation, comparable to prophetic vision: the moment when a hitherto unseen truth illuminates the whole existence
  • This explosive spirituality resides in the necessity of doing what must be done, with only imagination, rather than plan
  • another major question rears its divisive head: have we really overthrown the regime? To answer this, we realize that in our temporary unity, we avoided this question too: what was the regime? That we need now to know, because the answer will help us have some plan as to where to go from here, to determine how much of “the regime” is gone and how much still needs to be uprooted so as to arrive at the “goals of the revolution.” For some revolutionaries, the regime was simply the head of the regime. For others, it was an entire corrupt class surrounding it and benefiting from it. For others still, the regime is everyday life—the rotten head has infected all of society, and caused all society, its mores and social relations, to become equally rotten. For those, that society, too, needs to be overthrown. The old society, all of it, was “the regime.”
  • In an unjust world, there are always alternatives to revolt: the idea of fate; personal hedonism; intellectual immersions; criminality; clannish solidarity; the morality of fortitude; mind altering substances; soothing rituals; suicide; nihilism; graduate study. A revolution, therefore, is always a choice among other choices.
  • The revolutionary decision therefore is a choice to disregard reality and realism. It is a choice to act as an agent, to act freely and to feel freedom not as a theoretical principle, but as a new force that is itself creating this new person doing what a day before the revolution seemed to be outside of all realism. Revolutions, therefore, are primarily decisions against realism, and as such they create the free person who undertakes them and, in the process, empirically verifies a principle that previously had lacked credibility: that a different world is possible.
  • A common strategy of betrayal takes the form of the monopoly of memory. Monopoly of memory means that the revolution, along with its memory or heritage, has become monopolized by one faction against all others. In this case, those who see this betrayal will say that the “goals of the revolution” have been abandoned, or that the revolution has strayed from its path. But revolutions may have as many goals as they have revolutionaries, and consequently as many imagined pathways. Here, “betrayal” will be seen in someone’s choice to highlight one goal and disregard another, in someone’s feeling that a preferred path was not taken, even though it could have been, or that the revolution has stopped short, when it could have gone further.
  • the greatest enemy of all revolutions is forgetfulness, because it attacks the core of the revolutionary experience: how it defied odds, reality, rationality, and all that had seemed ordinary, solid and eternal
  • the revolutionary pattern of each era corresponds to where power has become porous then
  • The Arab uprisings of the current era, namely those of 2011 and 2019 (but not the civil wars that followed), reveal shared patterns: they all start out first in marginal, neglected areas, from which they migrate into the well-fortified center. They rely on spontaneity as their art of moving, not on organization, structure, or even a plan. They are suspicious of vanguardism, and seem to intuitively reject any strong idea of leadership. They prefer loose coordinating structures, and “coordinators” emerge as a new revolutionary species, indicating that revolutions now need sharing of information more than centralized guidance. They operate largely at a distance from political parties, and in fact give rise to no party that can claim to represent or embody the revolution. The agent of the revolution and the maker of history is the ordinary person, not the savior leader.
  • those revolutions spoke in the name of a vague and large entity called “the people,” not of any sub-group, class, tribe, sect, or even the “meek of the earth.” That generality expressed their character as a meeting place of all grievances.
  • The regime did not know any game other than that of the established system, and thought of the revolution as a passing noise that will dissipate in due time. The main mode of governing had become autocratic deafness, across the entire region.
  • the counter-revolution already knows that repression alone would be unable to save it from revolution. Thus it needs to fortify itself against the nascent revolutionary culture by promoting counter-revolutionary culture, aimed at the spirit of the revolution. For example: in place of the ordinary person, counter-revolutionary culture elevates the savior leader as the only worthy maker of history; in place of the belief that had emerged in the revolutionary moment of “the people” as an enlightened and noble body, counter-revolution fosters an image of peoplehood as a savage, illiterate mob, to be feared and policed, rather than provided with freedom and entrusted with capacity.
  • Culture and ideas, therefore, become central battlegrounds in the age of counter-revolution
  • Just as in the Arab case, where the revolutionary wave met counter-revolution, so did the global wave meet a global counter-wave. Both took place across dispersed geographies, indicating that like the revolutionary wave, the counter-revolutionary wave was inspired by a spreading feeling of threat or creeping disorder. The rise of an inter-linked right-wing populism globally after 2011 may indeed be an expression of a learning process of reaction, indicating the seriousness with which the revolutionary, or at least transformative, challenge was taken. And just as in the Arab case, the global counter-revolution learned from its encounter with revolution, real or imagined, that the old order must be defended in more authoritarian ways in the realm of policing and law, and more vigorously in the realm of ideas and culture.
  • The revolution was not just a surprising event, but an addition to the known facts of existence. And what was most certainly new here was the capacity to revolt, not what came next. That capacity was what the revolutionary moment had demonstrated.
  • The universal is always imperialistic when the only knowledge sought through it is confirmatory rather than transformative knowledge.
    • Ed Webb
       
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  • Discovery, therefore, has from the point of view of epistemological imperialism only quantitative rather than qualitative promise: it adds more of what I already know, not more to what I know.
  • there was a revolutionary person residing deep inside the conformist, traditional person one had seen earlier. If we do not know how to see that hidden person, we will not see the revolution.
Vincent Mimir

En Algérie, premières victimes après les émeutes - LeMonde.fr - 0 views

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    07/01/2011 : Au lendemain des affrontements qui ont une nouvelle fois opposé jeunes manifestants et forces de l'ordre dans plusieurs villes d'Algérie, le gouvernement algérien a confirmé que trois personnes avaient été tuées et près de 300 policiers blessés depuis le début de la semaine. Dans la matinée, un journal local affirmait qu'un jeune homme a été tué par balle dans le sud du pays.
Vincent Mimir

Retour au calme en Algérie après les manifestations contre la vie chère - LeM... - 0 views

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    07/01/2011 : Un conseil interministériel se tiendra samedi 8 janvier pour examiner les moyens de juguler la flambée des prix des produits alimentaires à l'origine des émeutes en Algérie, a annoncé vendredi le ministre du commerce, Mustapha Benbada.
Vincent Mimir

Tunisie : le principal fournisseur d'accès à Internet accusé de vol de mots d... - 0 views

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    07/01/2011 : L'Agence tunisienne d'Internet (ATI), le principal fournisseur d'accès à Internet du pays, est accusé d'enregistrer à l'insu de ses utilisateurs leurs mots de passe pour les services de Yahoo!, Google et Facebook. D'après le magazine en ligne Tech Herald, qui cite plusieurs spécialistes de la sécurité informatique, le fournisseur d'accès injecterait dans les pages de ces trois sites du code javascript lui permettant d'enregistrer les identifiants de connexion et les mots de passe.
Vincent Mimir

Tunisie : un deuxième homme s'immole par le feu à Sidi Bouzid - LeMonde.fr - 0 views

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    08/01/2011 : Un nouveau marchand ambulant s'est immolé par le feu, samedi 8 janvier, à Sidi Bouzid, en Tunisie. Agé de 50 ans, Moncef Ben K., marié et père de famille, s'est aspergé d'essence alors que se tenait le marché de la ville. Il a été emmené en ambulance et son état est jugé grave.
Vincent Mimir

Tunisie : nouvelle menace et tentative de suicide - LeMonde.fr - 0 views

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    05/01/2011 : Après la mort de Mohamed Bouazizi, le jeune vendeur de fruits et légumes qui s'est immolé, une femme et ses trois enfants ont grimpé sur un pylône électrique menaçant de se donner la mort pour obtenir un emploi et un logement, selon des témoins. Cette scène a eu lieu à Sidi Bouzid, foyer de contestation sociale.
Vincent Mimir

The Voice of the Ummah: Tunisie: Vague d'arrestations de blogueurs et militants-Yahyaou... - 0 views

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    06/01/2011 : TUNIS - Un rappeur et deux activistes blogueurs ont été arrêtés jeudi par la police en Tunisie, ont indiqué leurs familles, alors que l'organisation Reporters sans frontières (RSF) faisait état d'une quatrième arrestation, également d'un militant blogueur.
Vincent Mimir

The Voice of the Ummah: L'Europe ne doit plus soutenir Ben Ali; par Moncef Marzouki - 0 views

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    3/01/2011 : Dans les révélations de Wikileaks sur la Tunisie, on lit sous la plume des diplomates américains en poste à Tunis que le régime est « quasi mafieux », la femme du président  détestée et corrompue, que le régime est policier, qu'il n'écoute aucun conseil venu de l'intérieur ou de l'extérieur et que l'appui des gouvernements français, italien et espagnol à ce régime est étonnant.
Vincent Mimir

Tunisie : "Un silence embarrassé prévaut en Europe" - LeMonde.fr - 0 views

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    06/01/2011 : Isabelle Mandraud, journaliste au "Monde", estime que les difficultés économiques ont remis en cause le contrat tacite sur lequel reposait le régime tunisien.
Vincent Mimir

Manifestation de soutien aux Tunisiens à Paris : "Il fallait que la rage sort... - 0 views

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    07/01/2011 : Place de la fontaine des Innocents, à Paris, la pluie irrégulière qui tombe en cette fin de journée, jeudi 6 janvier, n'a pas empêché environ 250 manifestants de participer à un rassemblement de soutien au peuple tunisien. "Nous sommes ici pour affirmer notre solidarité à l'égard de nos confrères en Tunisie", assure un étudiant venu ici avec son frère et un ami. "Ce qui se passe est un mal pour un bien, poursuit-il, il fallait que la rage sorte un jour."
Vincent Mimir

The Voice of the Ummah: Tunisie: les USA, « préoccupés » par les troubles, co... - 0 views

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    07/01/2011 : Les Etats-Unis sont « préoccupés » par les troubles sociaux en Tunisie et ont convoqué l'ambassadeur de ce pays, Mohamed Salah Tekaya, pour demander le respect des libertés individuelles, notamment en matière d'accès à l'internet, a déclaré vendredi un haut responsable américain.
Vincent Mimir

Le Figaro - Flash Actu : Les écoles fermées en Tunisie - 0 views

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    10/01/2011 : Le gouvernement tunisien a annoncé aujourd'hui la fermeture "jusqu'à nouvel ordre" des écoles et universités dans tout le pays...
Vincent Mimir

Le Figaro - France : Explosion devant le consulat de Tunisie à Pantin - 0 views

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    09/01/2011 : Le consulat de Tunisie à Pantin, en Seine-Saint-Denis, a subi une «petite explosion» dimanche matin, qui a occasionné «des dégâts minimes» sur son rideau de fer.
Ed Webb

Summer's here and it's time to call the 'Arab spring' a revolution | Ed Rooksby | Comme... - 1 views

  • plenty of commentators are drawing direct comparisons between the current events and the collapse of the eastern bloc. This approach performs an ideological function, in that it discursively integrates the current upheaval into a pre-existing approved ideological narrative – the dictatorships of the Middle East are merely the latest in a long line of tyrannies to have been undermined by the relentless march of progress and liberal democracy. Thus these upheavals represent further confirmation of the moral and organisational superiority of the western order.
  • The dynamic of change in countries such as Egypt is much more radical. In Marxist terms, the "political revolution" (reorganisation of the political institutions and changes among the leading state personnel) threatens to carry over into a "social revolution" (a more far-reaching reconfiguration of social relations and of the economic system). This can be seen in the way the focus of struggle, post-Mubarak, has shifted from Tahrir Square to the political-economic space of factories as workers organise strikes, articulate demands that are both political and economic, and start to challenge the power of Egypt's "little Mubaraks" – the country's economic elites. The revolution is deepening and taking on a definite class dynamic.
  • the pressures which are driving the revolts in north Africa are just as much systemic, economic ones as they are to do with political repression in Arab states
Ed Webb

Egyptian Elections, Necessary But Not Sufficient - By Rabab El Mahdi | The Middle East ... - 0 views

  • for the first time Egyptian elections are characterized by one of the most important features of democracy: uncertainty
  • The absence of a pre-determined majority for the NDP is forcing all parties to shift their agendas away from simply opposing Mubarak policies to addressing voters concerns. It is also forcing all contenders and political forces, including the new post-January parties and "icons" to shift their attention away from television shows which have been their main venue and focus since the revolution, to building local constituencies and to adjusting their programs accordingly.
  • It is also allowing citizens to reclaim politics in a way that was shortly lived during the uprising, but soon gave away to an elitist monopoly of politics within a narrow public sphere of experts and ‘professional activists' debating on TV and in closed forums.
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  • Seen in isolation, elections cannot provide Egyptians with the much-needed transformation they went out for in January 2011. Luckily, elections seem to be happening in parallel with other forms of political participation, including continued strikes, protests, public-campaigns, and the rise of community and workplace organizations. The challenge for Egypt's transformation now is to build bridges between emerging institutional politics as expressed in elections, and the extra-institutional politics of the street and the workplace.
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