This article examines the intertwinings between emotion and political protest in the 2011 Egyptian revolution through the narratives of Egyptian female personal bloggers. Drawing from scholarship in the emotional turn of social movement theory and using Deborah Gould’s concept of emotional habitus, it aims at describing the dominant social moods at different moments of the revolutionary process, in order to address how these emotions fostered or, on the contrary, inhibited protest for social change. For this purpose, the article considers personal blogs as a modified form of Lauren Berlant’s intimate publics, alternative spaces through which affect circulates and a shared understanding of reality is constructed. Through qualitative content ...
The power and role played by social media in developing social and political movements for political...
Based on qualitative testimonial research with Egyptian youth activists, this article argues that Eg...
International audienceAbstract January 2011, Egypt: a huge revolutionary movement began. Since this ...
This article examines the intertwinings between emotion and political protest in the 2011 Egyptian r...
The Egyptian Revolution of 2011+ saw unprecedented involvement of Arab bloggers and online supporter...
The Egyptian Revolution of 2011+ saw unprecedented involvement of Arab bloggers and online supporter...
This dissertation examines Twitter communication from the 2011 Egyptian revolution to assess emotion...
This is a longitudinal study of the identity process through times of dramatic social change. Using ...
The Egyptian Revolution of 2011 and the popular protest movement that led to its success represent a...
This article draws on social movement theory to help explain how the use of social media, in partic...
A journal article by Dr. Fatuma Ahmed Ali an Assistant Professor of International Relations at the ...
This article examines women’s roles in the January 25th Revolution in Egypt. I examine portrayals of...
This dissertation offers a diachronic analysis of the 2011 Egyptian Revolution. This study holds tha...
As part of its ongoing Blogs and Bullets project, PeaceTech Lab analyzed the role of social media in...
This is an accepted manuscript of a book chapter published by I.B. Tauris (Bloomsbury) in New Media ...
The power and role played by social media in developing social and political movements for political...
Based on qualitative testimonial research with Egyptian youth activists, this article argues that Eg...
International audienceAbstract January 2011, Egypt: a huge revolutionary movement began. Since this ...
This article examines the intertwinings between emotion and political protest in the 2011 Egyptian r...
The Egyptian Revolution of 2011+ saw unprecedented involvement of Arab bloggers and online supporter...
The Egyptian Revolution of 2011+ saw unprecedented involvement of Arab bloggers and online supporter...
This dissertation examines Twitter communication from the 2011 Egyptian revolution to assess emotion...
This is a longitudinal study of the identity process through times of dramatic social change. Using ...
The Egyptian Revolution of 2011 and the popular protest movement that led to its success represent a...
This article draws on social movement theory to help explain how the use of social media, in partic...
A journal article by Dr. Fatuma Ahmed Ali an Assistant Professor of International Relations at the ...
This article examines women’s roles in the January 25th Revolution in Egypt. I examine portrayals of...
This dissertation offers a diachronic analysis of the 2011 Egyptian Revolution. This study holds tha...
As part of its ongoing Blogs and Bullets project, PeaceTech Lab analyzed the role of social media in...
This is an accepted manuscript of a book chapter published by I.B. Tauris (Bloomsbury) in New Media ...
The power and role played by social media in developing social and political movements for political...
Based on qualitative testimonial research with Egyptian youth activists, this article argues that Eg...
International audienceAbstract January 2011, Egypt: a huge revolutionary movement began. Since this ...