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Revolutionary anxieties

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Revolutionary anxieties sheds light on an unexplored dimension of the 2011 Egyptian revolution: the anxieties experienced by Cairo-based liberal elite who opposed the rise of the Islamists. It illu...
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  • 21 April 2026
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Revolutionary anxieties illuminates a largely overlooked dimension of the 2011 Egyptian revolution: the fears and uncertainties of Cairo's liberal elite, socialites and cultural actors who opposed the rise of the Muslim Brotherhood. The book offers fresh insight into the revolution's failure by examining the perspectives of those invested in preserving the status quo. Engaging with postcolonial theory and analysing elite Cairo through the lenses of gender and race, it draws on over two years of ethnographic research in spaces such as the Cairo Opera House, an Egyptian–European film festival and an exclusive sporting club. It shows how members of Egypt's liberal upper class asserted their privilege at a moment when class hierarchies were challenged, revealing the depth of counter-revolutionary sentiment among the city's affluent elite and offering a rarely told story of the Arab Spring.
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Price: $130.00
Pages: 216
Publisher: Manchester University Press
Imprint: Manchester University Press
Publication Date: 21 April 2026
ISBN: 9781526187673
Format: Hardcover
BISACs: POLITICAL SCIENCE / World / Middle Eastern, HISTORY / Revolutionary, POLITICAL SCIENCE / Geopolitics, Revolutionary groups and movements, Revolutions, uprisings, rebellions
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Liina Mustonen is a researcher at the Centre for Research on Ethnic Relations and Nationalism (CEREN), University of Helsinki

Preface
Introduction
1 “Go forward to the glorious past”: Politicized nostalgia
2 Attack on Civilization: saving the Egyptian cinema culture
3 The politics of high culture: Anxieties at the Opera House
4 The “Others”: The ugly, the ignorant servant, and the abstract poor
5 Gendered anxieties: Saving the modern woman
6 Postcolonial elites, identity, and memory culture
Conclusion
Epilogue