Sunni City : Tripoli from Islamist utopia to the Lebanese 'revolution' /
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Main Author: | |
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Corporate Author: | |
Format: | Electronic eBook |
Language: | English |
Published: |
Cambridge, United Kingdom ; New York, NY :
Cambridge University Press,
2022.
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Series: | Cambridge Middle East studies ;
69. |
Subjects: | |
Online Access: | Connect to this title online (unlimited simultaneous users allowed; 325 uses per year) |
Table of Contents:
- Cover
- Half-title
- Series information
- Title page
- Copyright information
- Contents
- List of Figures
- Acknowledgements
- Who Is Who in Tripoli?
- Timeline of Major Events
- Note on Arabic Transliteration
- Introduction: Tripoli, Secondary City of Lebanon
- The Geography of Modern-Day Tripoli
- Tripoli as a Microcosm of Ideological Movements
- Tripoli as a Secondary City
- City Corporatism in Divided Cities
- The Erosion of City Corporatism
- Broader Lessons from Tripoli
- Political Leaders as Communal Champions
- Sectarianization, Regionalism and Class in the Middle East
- 'Sunni Crisis' as State Crisis
- Notes on the Methodology
- Overview of the Book
- 1 Tripoli's City Corporatism and Identity Politics during the Nationalist Era (1920-1979)
- Tripoli's Economic Decline during the Late Ottoman Era (ca. 1700-1918)
- Tripoli as a City of Sunni Resistance during the Mandate Period (1920-1943)
- Tripoli's Refusal of the Lebanese State and the French Mandate (1920-1943)
- The National Pact (1943) and Beyond
- Tripoli's Protest Movements of the 1950s and 1960s
- Islam as a Counter-Culture: Bourgeois and Pro-Palestinian Islamists
- The Politicization of the Urban Poor and the Rise of Islamic Leftism in the 1970s
- The Beginning of Identity Politics in the 1970s
- The Origin of Lebanon's ʻAlawites
- The Political Awakening of ʻAlawites in Northern Lebanon in The Late 1960s and Early 1970s: The Syrian Model
- Increasing Tensions between Bab al-Tibbeneh and Jabal Mohsen
- The Syrian Intervention, Realignments, and New Wars
- Fighting between Jabal Mohsen and Bab al-Tibbeneh
- 2 Regional Proxy War: Radical Islamism (1982-1986) Alters Tripoli
- The Creation of the Tawhid Movement (1979-1982)
- The Impact on Sunni Lebanon of the Israeli Invasion
- Regional Support for Tawhid
- The Syrian-Palestinian War in Tripoli (September-November 1983)
- Tawhid's Gains and Losses
- Failure of Radical Sunni Islamism
- Tawhid's Failure to Appeal to Tripoli's Pious Muslims
- The Syrian Victory
- JI in the 1980s
- 3 The Postwar Erosion of Tripoli's City Corporatism
- The Postwar System of Representation
- Crises of Representation
- Decline of Ideologies as a Cross-class Solidarity Tie
- Transformations of Sunni Leadership: Decline of Urban Cohesion
- The Weakening of Patronage Ties and the Neoliberal Habitus of Tripoli's Post-War Elites
- The End of Pre-war Working Class Solidarity: The Case of Bab al-Tibbeneh
- Individual-level Economic Incentives and Cooperation with the Syrian Regime
- 'A Suit, a Tie, and the Qur'an': The Neoliberal Norms of the Conservative Bourgeoisie
- The Uphill Struggle of the Islamist Bourgeoisie
- Tripoli's Islamic Private Schools
- Islamic Self-Help and Prosperity Gospel
- The Conservative Urban Zone in Abi Samra