
Over the past three decades, through rises and falls in power, regime repression and exclusion, the Egyptian Muslim Brotherhood has endured, proving more resilient than any other Islamist movement in the world. In this book Khalil al-Anani explores the factors that have enabled the Brotherhood to survive so long within an ever-changing political landscape. Inside the Muslim Brotherhood unpacks the principal factors that shape the movement's identity, organization, and activism. Investigating the processes of socialization, indoctrination, recruitment, identification, networking, and mobilization that characterize the movement, al-Anani argues that the Brotherhood is not merely a political actor seeking power but an identity-maker that aims to change societal values, norms, and morals to line up with its ideology and worldview. The Brotherhood is involved in an intensive process of meaning construction and symbolic production that shapes individuals' identity and gives sense to their lives. The result is a distinctive code of identity that binds members together, maintains their activism, and guides their behavior in everyday life. Al-Anani attributes the Brotherhood's longevity to its tight-knit structure coupled with a complex membership system that has helped them resist regime penetration. The book also explores the divisions and differences within the movement and how these affect its strategy and decisions. The culmination of over a decade of research and interviews with leaders and members of the movement, this book challenges the dominant narratives about Islamists and Islamism as a whole.
What factors have enabled the Egyptian Muslim Brotherhood to maintain its resilience and influence within a volatile political landscape over the past three decades? Khalil al-Anani, a scholar specializing in Middle Eastern politics, utilizes over a decade of original research and interviews to analyze the movement's internal mechanisms. He posits that the Brotherhood functions primarily as an identity-maker rather than a conventional political actor, constructing a distinct ideological framework that governs the daily lives and values of its members.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Experts recognize this work as a significant contribution to the study of Islamist movements due to its focus on internal social dynamics rather than just political outcomes. Readers frequently note the academic rigor of the prose and the depth of the primary source interviews provided by the author.
Page Count:
217
Publication Date:
2016-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0190632089
ISBN-13:
9780190632083
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