
Revolutionary Justice Narrates The Power Struggle Between The Free Officers And Their Adversaries In The Aftermath Of Egypt's July Revolution Of 1952 By Studying Trials Held At The Revolution's Court And The People's Court. The Establishment Of These Tribunals Coincided With The Most Serious Political Crisis Between The New Regime And The Opposition-primarily The Muslim Brothers And The Wafd Party, But Also Senior Officials In The Previous Government. By This Point, The Initial Euphoria And The Unbridled Adoration For The Free Officers Had Worn Off, And The Focus Of The Public Debate Shifted To The Legitimacy Of The Army's Continued Rule. Yoram Meital Charts The Crucial Events Of Egyptian Revolution Both Within And Outside The Courtroom. The Tribunals' Transcripts, Which Constitute The Prime Source Of His Study, Offer A Rare Glimpse Of The Dialogue Between Parties That Held Conflicting Views. While Show Trials Against Political Dissidents Are Generally Considered Of Little Historical Value, Revolutionary Justice Lucidly Shows That The Rhetoric Generated By Egypt's Special Courts Played A Crucial Role In The Denouement Of Political Struggles, The Creation Of New Historical Trends, And The Shaping Of Both The Regime And The Opposition's Public Image. The Deliberations At The Courtroom Reinforced The Prevailing Emergency Atmosphere, Helping The Junta Advance Its Plans For A New Dispensation. On The Other Hand, The Responses Of Defendants And Witnesses During The Trial Exposed Weaknesses In The Official Hegemonic Narrative. Paradoxically, Oppositional Views That The Regime Tirelessly Endeavored To Silence Were Tolerated And Recorded In The Courtroom.
This work investigates how the special tribunals established following Egypt's 1952 July Revolution functioned as instruments of political consolidation and sites of ideological contestation. Yoram Meital, a scholar of Middle Eastern history, utilizes primary source transcripts from the Revolution's Court and the People's Court to analyze the power dynamics between the Free Officers and their political rivals. He argues that these trials were not merely performative, but served as critical arenas where the legitimacy of the new regime was both asserted and challenged.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Experts recognize this text as a significant contribution to the study of post-revolutionary legal systems and authoritarian consolidation in the Middle East. Readers frequently note the academic density of the prose, which provides a rigorous examination of primary source transcripts.
Page Count:
256
Publication Date:
2016-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0190600845
ISBN-13:
9780190600846
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