Arab Revolutions: Breaking Fear| Mediating Discourse of Democratic Uprising in Egypt: Militarized Language and the “Battles” of Abbasiyya and Maspero

Authors

  • Mervat Youssef Grinnell College
  • Heba Arafa Georgetown University
  • Anup Kumar Cleveland State University

Keywords:

Militarized language, Egyptian uprising, Abbasiya, media discourse, Maspiro,

Abstract

During the street protests in Egypt following the fall of the Mubarak regime in 2011, the media discourse was rooted in a militarized language used to mediate the unfolding events and a people’s struggle against entrenched power structure. We focus on two major conflict events between the security forces and the protesters: the clashes at Maspero (Radio and Television Building) and the march from Tahrir Square to the Ministry of Defense in Abbasiyya. We situate the two events within the trajectory of the uprising.

Author Biographies

Mervat Youssef, Grinnell College

Assistant ProfessorDepartment of French and Arabic641-236-4625

Heba Arafa, Georgetown University

Graduate Student (ABD)

Anup Kumar, Cleveland State University

Assistant ProfessorSchool of Communicaiton

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Published

2014-03-17

Issue

Section

Special Sections