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On the State of Egypt: A Novelist's Provocative Reflections [Hardcover]

Alaa Al Aswany
3.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (6 customer reviews)
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Book Description

15 Mar 2011
“Alaa Al Aswany is among the best writers in the Middle East today, a suitable heir to the mantle worn by Naguib Mahfouz, his great predecessor.” –Jay Parini, The Guardian (UK)
 
From one of Egypt’s most acclaimed novelists, here is a vivid chronicle of Egyptian society, with penetrating analysis of all the most urgent issues—economic stagnation, police brutality, poverty, the harassment of women and of the Christian minority, to name a few—that led to the stunning overthrow of the Mubarak government. Al-Aswany addresses himself to all the questions being asked within Egypt and beyond: who will be the next president, and how will he be chosen in a land where heretofore only simpletons, opportunists and stooges involved themselves with elections? What role will the Muslim Brotherhood play? How can democratic reforms be effected among a people used to such contradictions as the religiously observant policeman who commits torture? In a candid and controversial assessment of both the potential and limitations that will determine his country’s future, Al-Aswany reveals why the revolt that surprised the world was destined to happen.
 
“[The] star of a new generation of Egyptian novelists.” –The Independent (UK)
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

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Product details

  • Hardcover: 204 pages
  • Publisher: American University in Cairo Press (15 Mar 2011)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 977416461X
  • ISBN-13: 978-9774164613
  • Product Dimensions: 15.5 x 2.5 x 23.1 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 3.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (6 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 1,477,561 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Review

Al Aswany is a world writer, making Egyptian concerns into human ones and beautifully illuminating our always extraordinary and sometimes sad and baffling world. --The Times

Alaa Al Aswany, the author of The Yacoubian Building, is the novelist who best captured the bubbling frustrations of Hosni Mubarak's Egypt. --Financial Times

Al Aswany masterfully deciphers the forces behind social polarization over class, gender, race, religion, and politics ... refusing simple answers and tidy conclusions. --Booklist

'A showcase of some of the author's...qualities as a columnist: humour, bluntness and optimism.' --National

'What emerges is a portrait of what it's like to live through a nightmare, then to wake up in a sweat and discover it's over.' --The Sunday Herald

Why bother to read a collection of newspaper articles, especially when they turn on fast-moving events in a country where reality's face changes all the time? First, these come from Egypt, focus and fulcrum of the Arab transformation, and touch on trends and movements that resonate around the region, and the world. Second, they spring from the conscience and imagination of a witness to upheaval who combines first-rate observation with firm principles and an unerring moral compass. Last, and best, that writer is Alaa Al Aswany, a peerless teller of personal stories that reveal a general truth, and one incapable - as admirers of The Yacoubian Building, Chicago or Friendly Fire will know - of a dull or timid paragraph. --Independent

Aswany is the authentic voice of Egyptian liberalism. --Financial Times --This text refers to the Paperback edition.

About the Author

Alaa Al Aswany was born in 1957. A dentist by profession, Al Aswany is the author of the bestselling novel The Yacoubian Building, Chicago and the novella and short story collection Friendly Fire. He lives in Cairo. --This text refers to the Paperback edition.

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Customer Reviews

3.3 out of 5 stars
3.3 out of 5 stars
Most Helpful Customer Reviews
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful
3.0 out of 5 stars YESTERDAY'S PAPERS 5 July 2011
By Diacha TOP 1000 REVIEWER VINE™ VOICE
Format:Paperback
"On the State of Egypt" is a collection of articles published between November 2009 and October 2010 by Alaa Al Aswany, author of the "Yacoubian Building" and "Chicago," in "al-Dustar" and "al-Shorouk, " two opposition newspapers that have had editors arrested and abused. They are well hewn and full of the voice of liberal reason, justified outrage and patriotic concern. However, they are rather yesterday's news and readers who expect an analysis of how the January revolution developed or of what comes next will have to look elsewhere.

Al Aswany has two main topics. The first is that nothing can go right for Egypt as long as it is headed by a corrupt, effectively unelected and unaccountable regime. Nothing can go right, not the economy, the justice system or even healthcare, as long as every subordinate official, from ministers (many of them grossly unqualified) down are dependent exclusively on the favor of the regime for their prosperity. Al Aswany is outraged by the elitist view that "ordinary Egyptians ... are rabble or riffraff who do not know their own best interests;" or by the attitude of the President and his family that they are making great sacrifices on behalf of "their" people; or that Mubarak can even think that he can pass on the country to his son "as if it were a poultry farm."

The author's second main target is "flawed religiosity" or excessive "piety without morality." Egypt has seen a marked increase in religiosity in recent years. Al Aswany attributes this to the secondary impact of the repression and deprivation engendered by the corrupt regime and also to the lavish funding of Wahhabi preachers (including television clerics) by the itself corrupt Saudi monarchy. How can policemen in good conscience go back and forth between their torture chambers and the prayer-rooms conveniently installed for them to exercise their piety at the appointed hours throughout the day? How can bitter clerics rant against the mere thought of women being improperly "covered" (which is not at all required by Islam) and then fail to speak out against the all-corrupt, anti true Islam regime? (The abuse of women is another of Al Aswani's main concerns).

By its nature, this collection is close to being overtaken by events and full of repetition. This is compensated to a degree by the author's elegant writing (translated here by Jonathan Wright) and his use of anecdote, fable and parable. One article, for example, recounts a chance meeting with Gamal Mubarak in a fashionable restaurant only to "reveal" at the end that it was all a dream. In another piece, al Aswany contrasts the abject apology that Gordon Brown was obliged to make following his inadvertent insult to Gillian Duffy with the complete lack of apology on the part of his Egyptian counterpart to the entire population for his widespread abuse.

Al Aswany's mantra, repeated at the end of nearly all these articles, is "Democracy is the solution." The reader can hardly disagree, but whether it will be the outcome is another matter, not addressed here.
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4 of 5 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars "Does rigging elections count as a Major Sin?" 9 Jun 2011
By Mary Whipple HALL OF FAME TOP 100 REVIEWER
Format:Hardcover
Alaa Al Aswany made his literary mark in 2002 when he wrote The Yacoubian Building, the "best-selling novel in Egypt for two years," according to National Geographic, and a hugely popular Egptian film. Now Al Aswany may become even more famous for a series of articles he published in the Arabic press from 2005 to the date of the revolution. Always a believer in human rights, which he believed were being trampled during the thirty-year rule of Hosni Mubarak, the author was a vocal supporter of those who were beginning to challenge Mubarak publicly. In this collection of his articles, beginning in 2005, Al Aswany uses his literary power and popularity to try to reach all elements of Egyptian society, examining some of the issues which have separated Egyptians from each other in an effort to show the importance of cooperation for the larger purpose of ousting the regime and bringing about democracy in a country which has known only despotism, poverty, and corruption for decades. Few who read these articles will doubt their impact on the populace, leading eventually to the demonstrations in Tahrir Square and the far-reaching revolution which began on January 25, 2011, and continued for eighteen days.

At the beginning of the book, Al Aswany explains that repression and poverty were so long-standing that the populace, over two or three generations, had learned submission, and no organized system existed to provide a way for the masses to rebel. Those lucky enough to have jobs, had to work, and these found their own personal solutions to their economic and personal crises. Many talented and educated people left the country because they did not have personal connections to government officials who would hire them. The poor starved. More recently, Saudi oil money, with the blessing of the Mubarak regime, financed the promotion of Wahhabi Islam within Egypt, a very conservative and fundamental interpretation of Islam which requires obeying the ruler, no matter how corrupt he might be.

Many of the local television stations, owned by Saudis, even now feature uneducated Wahhabi preachers who appeal specifically to the poor and often illiterate in an effort to sway them to this extremely conservative--and very controlling--Wahhabi point of view. Wahhabi wives and daughters are required to wear the face-covering niqab, though as recently as the 1970s, Egyptian women were treated as full human beings, and wore modern clothing that revealed their arms and legs. Ironically, as the author points out, sexual harassment was much less common then than in the present. In addition, the more this movement grew, the more women were taken out of the government's equation, and the more secure the regime could feel.

Comprehensive examples of the Mubarak regime's many long-standing economic and social crimes, too numerous to mention here, are cited in these articles, which cover just about every issue in Egyptian life. Of special significance to the author is the fact that President Mubarak did not defend Egypt even when Egyptians were detained and flogged in Saudi Arabia, tortured in Kuwait, killed by Israelis on the Egyptian border, or attacked by Algerians during a World Cup soccer match. On January 25, 2011, when a call went out on the internet to demonstrate in Tahrir Square, about 200 - 300 people were expected. Over a million showed up. The author was there giving speeches for eighteen straight days, returning home only briefly during that time, because, he says over and over again, "Democracy is the solution." An eye-opening and important book for those who care about justice. Mary Whipple
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1.0 out of 5 stars Not so Alaswani's 19 April 2013
By Mo.
Format:Paperback|Amazon Verified Purchase
" bedouin socities that are closed, backward, and hypocritical." do anybody imagin this is Alaa Alaswani's words. I am so frustrated by the book specially after reading the yacoubian Building. It contains some useful ideas about Egypt in general but I think still he hide much that he was unable to say. I do not think the anti-religious ideas are accurate. The fact that this book is a collection of articles affect the quality of the book as the reader could find many repeated parts . I forced myself to finish the book.
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