Description |
1 online resource (xiii, 203 pages) : illustration |
Series |
Middle East today |
|
Middle East today.
|
Contents |
1. Chapter 1: Introduction -- 2. Chapter 2: Affective Disengagement -- 3. Chapter 3: Ideology of the group -- 4. Chapter 4: Political Disengagement: Exiting the Brotherhood in 2011 and Afterwards -- 5. Chapter 5: Pre-2011 Disengagement: A Comparative Analysis of Change and Continuity -- 6. Chapter 6: Conclusion |
Summary |
The book offers a processual and discursive perspective on how individuals exit the Muslim Brotherhood. The framework is based on an interaction of 'micro' psychological and emotional factors, 'meso' organizational factors and 'macro' political developments linked to the specific case of the Muslim Brotherhood and Egypt during the Arab Spring. Based on interviews conducted in Egypt, Turkey, Qatar and the United Kingdom, the author traces in-depth narratives of exiters while they return to their private life or resort to political activism of another stripe. This work examines thought-provoking patterns pertaining to elements long under-explored in the scholarship and stands out as it systematically identifies this unexamined subset of Brotherhood members: peaceful leavers. Mustafa Menshawy is Assistant Professor at the Doha Institute for Graduate Studies, Qatar, and Associate Fellow at University of Westminster, UK |
Notes |
Includes index |
|
Online resource; title from PDF title page (SpringerLink, viewed October 17, 2019) |
Subject |
Ikhwān al-Muslimūn.
|
|
Ikhwān al-Muslimūn |
|
Political participation -- Middle East
|
|
Political culture -- Middle East
|
|
Islam and politics.
|
|
Islam and state.
|
|
Islam -- Psychology.
|
|
Islam -- Psychology
|
|
Islam and state
|
|
Islam and politics
|
|
Political culture
|
|
Political participation
|
|
Middle East
|
Form |
Electronic book
|
ISBN |
9783030278601 |
|
3030278603 |
|