ISBN:
9781784534332
,
1784534331
Sprache:
Englisch
Seiten:
x, 306 Seiten
Serie:
Library of modern Middle East studies 180
Serie:
Library of modern Middle-East studies
DDC:
909
Schlagwort(e):
Hizballah (Lebanon)
;
Jamʻīyat al-Ikhwān al-Muslimīn (Egypt)
;
Hizballah (Lebanon)
;
Jamʻīyat al-Ikhwān al-Muslimīn (Egypt)
;
Muslimbruderschaft
;
Islamic fundamentalism Political aspects
;
Lebanon
;
Islamic fundamentalism Political aspects
;
Egypt
;
Islamic fundamentalism Political aspects
;
Islamic fundamentalism Political aspects
;
Politischer Islam
;
Partei
;
Parteipolitik
;
Vergleichende Analyse
;
Comparative analysis
;
Lebanon Politics and government
;
1990-
;
Egypt Politics and government
;
1981-
;
Lebanon Politics and government 1990-
;
Egypt Politics and government 1981-2011
;
Ägypten
;
Libanon
;
Islam
;
Fundamentalismus
;
Muslimbruderschaft
;
Ḥizb Allāh
;
Ägypten
;
Libanon
;
Muslimbruderschaft
;
Ḥizb Allāh
;
Geschichte 1928-2015
Kurzfassung:
Who are the Muslim Brotherhood and Hizbullah? What do the two movements - one Sunni and one Shi'a - have in common? Despite being classified by a number of countries as 'terrorist' organisations, both are in fact serious political players in the states in which they operate - Egypt and Lebanon. Both have, at various points, advocated pan-Islamism: the unity of Muslims under an Islamic state or caliphate, but, rather than considering them as extremist religious movements, Eva Dingel here studies them as players within the political process. She considers why, at certain points, they have chosen to play by the conventional political rules, while during other periods, they have applied different, more extreme, methods of political protest. Dingel's comparative history of two of the most prominent political Islamist movements sheds light on the complex - and often misunderstood - interaction between Islam and politics in the Middle East. This book is essential reading for anyone who wants to understand the changing dynamics of politics in the Islamic world.
Anmerkung:
1. Islamist Movements as Social Movements and Political Actors: A Framework for Analysis
,
2. The Muslim Brotherhood's Strategies: Moderation Forced by Repression
,
3. Hizbullah: Expanded Action Repertoire in a Fragile Regional and National Context
,
4. A Comparative Perspective on Political Strategies of Hizbullah and the Egyptian Muslim Brothers
Permalink