Includes bibliographical references (pages 231-256) and index.
Contesting the Dominant Narratives of the Arab Spring / Michael J. McNeal and Amentahru Wahlrab -- Washington's Liberalist Ideological Stance and Contradictory Policies in the Middle East / Michael J. McNealStrategic or Democratic Interests? Framing US Foreign Policy in the Middle East Uprisings / Anthony R. DiMaggio -- The Arab Spring, US Intervention in Libya, and the Lingering Politics of Rwandan Remorse / Isaac Kamola -- Whither Wasatiyya? Locating Egypt's Liminal Actors Five Years after the Uprising / Michaelle Browers -- Discourses of Democracy and Gender: How and Why Do Women's Rights Matter? / Meghana Nayak -- Justin Zongo and the Place of the "Arab Spring": Repression, Resistance, and Revolution in Egypt and Burkina Faso / Nicholas A. Jackson -- A Matter of Protest: the Arab Spring in Syria / Larbi Sadiki and Layla Saleh -- Making Revolutionaries out of "Safe Citizens": Sovereignty, Political Violence, and the Arab Uprisings / Amentahru Wahlrab -- The Arab Uprisings and Twenty-First-Century Global Crisis: Is There an Emerging Network of Global Dissent? / Eric Fattor.
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From nonviolent protests in Cairo and Manama to the ousting of Libya's Gaddafi and the beginning of the Syrian Civil War, the series of uprisings which swept through the Middle East and North Africa from late 2010 have been burdened with the collective hopes and expectations of the world. Western supporters quickly identified these uprisings as a collective "awakening" -- a move towards democracy -- but the continued unrest in these regions defies many of these more optimistic contemporary predictions. The "Arab Spring" and its failure exposed a new set of questions: What motivates American "democracy promotion"? Does the US really want self-determination in the Middle East and North Africa? Where did the expectations of the protestors fit into this narrative? [This book] provides a comprehensive assessment of Western foreign policy towards the Arab world today. With analysis on subjects as diverse as social media and Islamic centrism, and drawing from examples throughout the MENA region, the book deals with the perception of Arabs and Arab culture in the American psyche and its effect on East-West relations. By analyzing both Western responses to uprisings and the reactions of the protestors themselves, the contributors expose theoretical and practical inconsistencies that suggest a rising tension between those that promote democracy and those who practice it. -- Back cover.