Employing an engaging question-and-answer format; The Arab Uprisings explores the revolutionary protests that have rocked the Arab world since late 2010. In this updated and revised second edition; James L. Gelvin explores the varied paths taken by the uprisings and assesses their historical and global significance. Gelvin begins with an overview-What were the conditions in the Arab world that led to the uprisings? Where did the demands for human and democratic rights and social and economic justice come from?-before turning to specific countries in the region. He examines how the long history of state-building in Tunisia and Egypt ultimately determined the paths taken by uprisings there. He explains why the weakness of state institutions in Libya and Yemen led to violence and chaos. He explores the commonalities of the "coup-proofed" states Bahrain and Syria and the tragic course of their uprisings. In the final chapter; he discusses the implications of the uprisings. What do they mean for the United States; al-Qaeda; and the balance of power in the region? What do they say about the viability of the Arab state system? What effects have they had on the Israel-Palestine conflict? What conclusions might we draw from the uprisings so far? When will we know their historical meaning?What Everyone Needs to Know® is a registered trademark of Oxford University Press.
#345778 in Books Zone Books 2002-01-01Original language:ItalianPDF # 1 9.00 x .50 x 6.00l; .70 #File Name: 189095117X176 pages
Review
26 of 26 people found the following review helpful. Testimony: speaking qua the impossibility of speakingBy Timothy LavenzI am writing this review to counter-act another review; which asserts that Agamben "places himself in a position of having a truer knowledge of life in the camps than those who were actually there;" and that Agamben tries to 'correct' the testimonies of actual survivors. This is such a serious assertion it borders on slander; and Agamben does nothing of the sort; not on a single page of this book. Thus; it's no surprise that that reviewer gives no example of what he is referring to with this assertion. And not incidentally; this book "argues" that bearing witness has little to do with an "accurate knowledge" or the "correctness" of the content of the testimony. Rather; for Agamben; "the value of a testimony lies essentially in what it lacks" (pg. 34). It is clear that this reviewer condemns Agamben's argument as "nothing new" without first grasping it; and it is no surprise that their review doesn't actually articulate the argument that it is condemning with such a swift brush. Before denouncing an argument; one must be able to present it oneself (especially in a review that is meant to inform potential readers). In my review; I will attempt to outline Agamben's trajectory in support of this work; a work which I (along with Lost-Lacanian) believe is stellar and definitely worth the "difficult read" that it requires.Agamben begins with Primo Levi; a survivor of the camp who became a writer in order to bear witness to Auschwitz. To quote Levi; who speaks here with a voice common to all survivors of the camps: "We; the survivors; are not the true witnesses." This is because those who could have properly served witness to the camps and the death chambers have; obviously; died before they could testify. Thus: to assume the responsibility of bearing witness is to assume a responsibility that cannot be assumed; to bear witness to what the witness cannot bear witness to; for all "complete witnesses" are dead: "no one can bear witness from the inside of death" (pg. 35). But this is not all. A phenomenon common to all studies of the camps (from which Agamben draws heavily and critiques very concisely as he advances his thought) is the phenomenon of the "Muselmann." The Muselmann was the name given to those in the camp who had lost all will and consciousness; those who were driven to an unconditional fatalism; those whose very life and gaze seemed to have fled them. Emotion could no longer be evoked in them and letters from family members no longer gave them hope. These were the men in whom power had totally overcome their ability to be; who cared only to scrounge for bits of food (Agamben's "bare life"). Other prisoners were most concerned with avoiding the Muselmann because they felt that a Muselmann of their own was constantly on the verge of emerging in them. Agamben cites testimony of survivors whose first concern was to retain that "inner kernel" of their person; that thread of hope that kept them "alive" in spite of the constant possibility of becoming a "lifeless" Muselmann themselves. Referencing a rare videotape taken of the camp; Agamben points out that it seems comparatively easy for the cameraman to linger over the corpses and dead bodies; but that when one of these wandering; half-living Muselmanner appear in the shot; the camera quickly shifts back to the cadavers. And yet it is precisely to this phenomenon that folks like Levi feel indebted to bear witness; in fact; to this horrid phenomenon (of absolute desubjectification) alone. It is at this point of the Muselmann where Agamben sees the state of exception that might key us into a universal; where all the categories that we apply to "human" slip into the "non-human": in the Muselmann it is impossible to distinguish between the two.It is here that Agamben shifts to the question of dignity; the very worth of which the camps strip away; and shame; which Agamben shows is the dominant sentiment of survivors. He cites Wiesel who says; "I live; therefore I am guilty." It is this shame that the survivor is incapable of mastering; for it lies in the inability on the part of the survivor to separate the guilt of having survived (the nagging question "Why did I survive and not another?") and the innocence of having survived (the fact that survival seemed not to be based on any criteria but random chance). It is here that Agamben begins to identify this sentiment of shame as the dominant sentiment of the subject. Shame is grounded in the incapacity of a being to break from itself and to change the "it was." Shame is grounded in the fact that we cannot hide what we would like to hide. Shame is there where our impulse to flee ourselves meets up with the impossibility of evading or escaping ourselves. Shame is grounded in the intimacy of being present to ourselves even as we are losing ourselves (which reaches its limit in the unbearable sight of the Muselman); when we remain the "I" even through the most severe desubjectification; self-disorder; self-oblivion; expropriation; and the very destruction of our experience (pgs 104-106). Shame; like the subject; is there in that "flush" that consigns us to that from which we cannot get away. Here; to-be-subjected and to-be-sovereign are inseparable and yet forever distinct and disjoined. The subject is forever fractured in its passivity; between its receptive role (Muselmann; desubjectification) and its active role (witness; re-subjectification as bearing witness to the desubjectification). After considering the sentiment of shame at length; Agamben argues that the subject shows itself to have no other content than its own desubjectification.For Agamben; bearing witness to desubjectification is what constitutes the ethical subject as such.I'm unable to go into detail with Agamben's lengthy excursus into desubjectification in relation to poetic consciousness (via Keats; Celan; Pessoa); philosophy (via the Greeks; Heidegger; Foucault); and linguistics (Saussure; Benveniste). But this excursus; which comprises the latter half of the book; is the portion of his research that shows testimony in its proper weight; import; and scope. It is a truly masterful interweaving of sources and perspectives; and it is presented with the ease and clarity that any reader of Agamben is accustomed to. When forced to summarize a point of intersection; I would say that Agamben "argues" something to this effect: knowing is barred speaking and speaking is barred knowing. Consciousness; the "I;" only has a consistency qua language as the event of language; but this very event divides the "I" constitutively; for to enter into discourse is already to be fractured. Thus the irreducible disjunction between "vital functions" and "inner history;" which is a duality that Agamben traces through the work of biologists and psychologists (Binswanger; Bichat; Kimura). His research into Auschwitz survivors who must bear witness to that which they cannot bear witness meets up with all his other research threads under the general idea: "To be conscious means: to be consigned to something that cannot be assumed." Suffice it to say; for an attentive reader; Agamben's meditations on enunciation; voice; consciousness and the "I" will prove to be infinitely illuminating and thought-provoking; especially for those who are willing to put themselves at stake in this reading and to truly think through our being "constituted divided."Ultimately; "In testimony; the empty place of the subject becomes the decisive question" and "it is a matter of situating the subject in the disjunction between a possibility and an impossibility of speech" (pg 145). Or again; to bear witness is to "place oneself in one's own language in the position of those who have lost it" (pg 161); which clearly hearkens the writings of survivors like Levi who attempt to bear witness to those "complete witnesses" who are barred from witnessing and language: "The authority of the witness consists in his capacity to speak solely in the name of an incapacity to speak-- that is; in his or her being a subject" (pg 158). In the place of those who could not testify "for themselves;" those who could not even speak; the one who bears witness leaves behind a remnant that bears witness to this inability to speak. In this bearing witness; the survivor (but also any witnessing-subject) founds a language as what will remain of Auschwitz (just as a poet founds a language). When Arendt was asked "What remains?" after Auschwitz; she replied "The mother tongue remains." Agamben might have also cited Celan; another survivor of the camps; who has written that language was the one thing that remained with him despite all of his losses. We could also point to Celan as the poet-survivor whose difficult poetry also shows us the impossibility of speaking put to the task of speaking; to speak in utter darkness and yet bear witness by this very lack and impossibility-- truly; to stutter a testimony in the hopeless night of non-knowledge.I've tried to give an exposition of the main ideas of this book and to encourage any interested party to read it. Hopefully I have done some "justice" to its broad yet focused trajectory; which has deep resonances with the rest of Agamben's oeuvre. I hope that what lacks here in my review is also what; in the spirit of testimony; can give it its value.35 of 36 people found the following review helpful. Haunting; Captivating; UnspeakableBy Lost LacanianI read this book after having read Agamben's big book "Homo Sacer." I found the analysis of bare life (homo sacer) in that book to be so fascinating that I picked up "Remnants;" to see where else Agamben might go. This book is some of the most compelling theory I have read to date. The book has three major categories of analysis: the witness; the musselman (literally; the muslim); and shame. Each of these three categories have to do with the inhuman quality of being human and the speakability of that which is unspeakable. Indeed; Agamben deploys subtle thought in order to construct these internal contradictions that actually played on in the extreme case of Auschwitz. As one might expect from the title; this book is haunting. The testimonials given of the Musselman are particularly disturbing. Indeed; the experiences of Auschwitz is unspeakable. Perhaps; most startling is that Agamben argues our modern political paradigm is basically a sedated Auschwitz in which all of us can be turned into Musselmen; indeed; the musselman is that inhuman potential within our humanity. In short; this book is haunting; captivating; yet; unspeakable in the topics it tackles and the issues with which it wrestles. If you are not acquainted with Agamben; then; you might first be taken off guard by his verse and thesis style. But once you get in the flow; the form of his writing adds to its content.0 of 0 people found the following review helpful. Agamben is an academic to the utmost. His prose ...By CustomerAgamben is an academic to the utmost. His prose are beyond scholarly; making it somewhat difficult to understand. You must commit yourself to rather close reading to understand what he is getting at with his passages.As far as the content is concerned; this is a truly remarkable; yet haunting; piece on The Witness.