La philosophie de la Révolution de Gamal Abdel Nasser entre questions nationale, sociale et culturelle

In the first place, this research made it possible to pinpoint the exact origin of Gamal Abdel Nasser’s famous text. This text, which concerns the Revolution of 23 July 1952, was published for the first time between August 1953 and July 1954 as three press articles. The Arabic critical edition enabl...

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author Inowlocki, Didier
author_browse Inowlocki, Didier
author_facet Inowlocki, Didier
author_sort Inowlocki, Didier
collection Directory of Open Access Books
description In the first place, this research made it possible to pinpoint the exact origin of Gamal Abdel Nasser’s famous text. This text, which concerns the Revolution of 23 July 1952, was published for the first time between August 1953 and July 1954 as three press articles. The Arabic critical edition enables one to simultaneously read the original text and the modifications that occurred when the text was republished as a booklet in 1954 and 1956 and subsequently became an emblematic text of the new regime. The French translation and its critical edition show the modifications made between those three versions when they modify the translation and add a linguistic and historical critical apparatus. The analysis brings the dialogue between the text and its original context back to life. We thereby discover that Nasser’s text was a response to three previous articles entitled The Philosophy of the coup published by the young left Wafdist guard. A comparison of those articles and Nasser’s articles enables one to understand that behind the question of whether the seizure of power by the Free Officers was a revolution or a coup, lies a deeper debate on the place of social justice within the struggle for national liberation. The analysis then addresses the matter of the articulation between social justice and the national liberation struggle. The issue is placed within a theoretical framework which is inspired mainly by the study of ‘the anti-colonial nationalist Hegelian-Marxist discourse’ as propounded by Dipesh Chakrabarty. In so doing, we recall that Nasser’s text explicitly calls for class struggle.
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spelling doab-20.500.12854ir-1450662024-09-16T09:55:37Z La philosophie de la Révolution de Gamal Abdel Nasser entre questions nationale, sociale et culturelle Inowlocki, Didier Middle East history anthology modern history of Egypt British Empire colonialism nationalism national liberation struggle class struggle Revolution of 23 July 1952 Free Officers Gamal Abdel Nasser The Philosophy of the Revolution Egypt’s liberation Mohammed Hassanein Heikal Mohammed Naguib Akhir sa‘a Dar al‑Ma‘arif Ibrahim Til‘at thema EDItEUR::N History and Archaeology::NH History::NHB General and world history In the first place, this research made it possible to pinpoint the exact origin of Gamal Abdel Nasser’s famous text. This text, which concerns the Revolution of 23 July 1952, was published for the first time between August 1953 and July 1954 as three press articles. The Arabic critical edition enables one to simultaneously read the original text and the modifications that occurred when the text was republished as a booklet in 1954 and 1956 and subsequently became an emblematic text of the new regime. The French translation and its critical edition show the modifications made between those three versions when they modify the translation and add a linguistic and historical critical apparatus. The analysis brings the dialogue between the text and its original context back to life. We thereby discover that Nasser’s text was a response to three previous articles entitled The Philosophy of the coup published by the young left Wafdist guard. A comparison of those articles and Nasser’s articles enables one to understand that behind the question of whether the seizure of power by the Free Officers was a revolution or a coup, lies a deeper debate on the place of social justice within the struggle for national liberation. The analysis then addresses the matter of the articulation between social justice and the national liberation struggle. The issue is placed within a theoretical framework which is inspired mainly by the study of ‘the anti-colonial nationalist Hegelian-Marxist discourse’ as propounded by Dipesh Chakrabarty. In so doing, we recall that Nasser’s text explicitly calls for class struggle. 2024-09-16T09:55:35Z 2024-09-16T09:55:35Z 2021 book ONIX_20240916_9782858314430_272 9782858314430 9782858313044 https://directory.doabooks.org/handle/20.500.12854/145066 fre MéditerranéeS image/jpeg Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International https://books.openedition.org/pressesinalco/19458 Presses de l’Inalco 10.4000/books.pressesinalco.19458 In the first place, this research made it possible to pinpoint the exact origin of Gamal Abdel Nasser’s famous text. This text, which concerns the Revolution of 23 July 1952, was published for the first time between August 1953 and July 1954 as three press articles. The Arabic critical edition enables one to simultaneously read the original text and the modifications that occurred when the text was republished as a booklet in 1954 and 1956 and subsequently became an emblematic text of the new regime. The French translation and its critical edition show the modifications made between those three versions when they modify the translation and add a linguistic and historical critical apparatus. The analysis brings the dialogue between the text and its original context back to life. We thereby discover that Nasser’s text was a response to three previous articles entitled The Philosophy of the coup published by the young left Wafdist guard. A comparison of those articles and Nasser’s articles enables one to understand that behind the question of whether the seizure of power by the Free Officers was a revolution or a coup, lies a deeper debate on the place of social justice within the struggle for national liberation. The analysis then addresses the matter of the articulation between social justice and the national liberation struggle. The issue is placed within a theoretical framework which is inspired mainly by the study of ‘the anti-colonial nationalist Hegelian-Marxist discourse’ as propounded by Dipesh Chakrabarty. In so doing, we recall that Nasser’s text explicitly calls for class struggle. 10.4000/books.pressesinalco.19458 a988fd18-fa61-4b95-b658-b8b53fe4cc1c 9782858314430 9782858313044 392 Paris open access
spellingShingle Middle East
history
anthology
modern history of Egypt
British Empire
colonialism
nationalism
national liberation struggle
class struggle
Revolution of 23 July 1952
Free Officers
Gamal Abdel Nasser
The Philosophy of the Revolution
Egypt’s liberation
Mohammed Hassanein Heikal
Mohammed Naguib
Akhir sa‘a
Dar al‑Ma‘arif
Ibrahim Til‘at
thema EDItEUR::N History and Archaeology::NH History::NHB General and world history
Inowlocki, Didier
La philosophie de la Révolution de Gamal Abdel Nasser entre questions nationale, sociale et culturelle
title La philosophie de la Révolution de Gamal Abdel Nasser entre questions nationale, sociale et culturelle
title_full La philosophie de la Révolution de Gamal Abdel Nasser entre questions nationale, sociale et culturelle
title_fullStr La philosophie de la Révolution de Gamal Abdel Nasser entre questions nationale, sociale et culturelle
title_full_unstemmed La philosophie de la Révolution de Gamal Abdel Nasser entre questions nationale, sociale et culturelle
title_short La philosophie de la Révolution de Gamal Abdel Nasser entre questions nationale, sociale et culturelle
title_sort la philosophie de la revolution de gamal abdel nasser entre questions nationale sociale et culturelle
topic Middle East
history
anthology
modern history of Egypt
British Empire
colonialism
nationalism
national liberation struggle
class struggle
Revolution of 23 July 1952
Free Officers
Gamal Abdel Nasser
The Philosophy of the Revolution
Egypt’s liberation
Mohammed Hassanein Heikal
Mohammed Naguib
Akhir sa‘a
Dar al‑Ma‘arif
Ibrahim Til‘at
thema EDItEUR::N History and Archaeology::NH History::NHB General and world history
topic_facet Middle East
history
anthology
modern history of Egypt
British Empire
colonialism
nationalism
national liberation struggle
class struggle
Revolution of 23 July 1952
Free Officers
Gamal Abdel Nasser
The Philosophy of the Revolution
Egypt’s liberation
Mohammed Hassanein Heikal
Mohammed Naguib
Akhir sa‘a
Dar al‑Ma‘arif
Ibrahim Til‘at
thema EDItEUR::N History and Archaeology::NH History::NHB General and world history
url ONIX_20240916_9782858314430_272
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