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Alaouites --- Alawieten --- Alawijin --- Alawis --- Alawites --- Alawiyin --- Alevi-Bektashi --- Alevis --- Alevites --- Alouite --- Ansarii --- Nosairians --- Nossarii --- Nusayris --- Nosairians. --- Islamic sects --- Islam --- Islam and politics. --- Bektashi. --- Islamic sects - Turkey. --- Islam - Turkey.
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Évoquer les minorités en Islam, c’est penser immédiatement aux minorités religieuses non musulmanes en pays majoritairement musulman et tout particulièrement à celles qui ont bénéficié du statut de dhimmi, de « tributaire ». Ce recueil propose un déplacement du regard sur la notion de minorités en l’interrogeant à la fois du point de vue de l’histoire et du politique. Il sera tout autant question ici des musulmans en Europe ou en Chine que des minorités présentes dans les pays d’Islam, qu’il s’agisse de minorités confessionnelles ou sociétales regroupées autour d’affinités politiques, idéologiques, religieuses ou de genre.
Religion --- alaouites --- chiisme --- chrétiens --- féminisme islamique --- homosexualité --- imamisme --- islam --- ismaélisme --- musulmans chinois --- sunnisme --- Alawites --- Shiism --- China --- Christians --- Islamic feminism --- homosexuality --- Imamism --- Islam --- Ismailism --- Chinese Muslims --- Sunnism --- gender
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Revolutions in the Arab world have not only shaken or brought down regimes deemed irremovable. Their shock waves have also upset the relations of Arab countries with other states in the world. It is this fundamental and yet little explored question that this book addresses on the repercussions of the Arab revolutions on a regional and international scale, through the examples of Turkey, Iran, Russia, Israel and from China. Each of the chapters of the first part thus offers an off-centre look at the revolutionary processes still at work. The second part of the book allows a completely different shift. By focusing on the media and on the artistic scene, it is a profound reformulation of political discourses and practices that the contributors to this work bring to light. And this, for questions as central as the practices of Islam, the capacities of engagement, and conversely the perpetuation of the logics of obedience. Finally, this book explores, in its last section, the social and spatial transformations on which the revolutions have shed new light: how the liberalization policy led by the al-Assad regime has contributed to the outbreak of violence in Syria. ; how the migrations of workers in the Maghreb, the Middle East and the Gulf have influenced the transformation of Arab regimes; how, lastly, the revolutions changed the relationship of the Egyptians to the public space and of the Libyans to their territory.
Arab countries --- Politics and government --- islamisme --- Israël --- Tunisie --- jeunesse --- Jordanie --- Syrie --- Égypte --- sémantique textuelle --- Bahreïn --- Baas --- Libye --- médias --- Alaouites --- communauté internationale --- Iran --- autoritarisme --- migration --- confessionalisme --- Réseaux sociaux --- Turquie
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Revolutions in the Arab world have not only shaken or brought down regimes deemed irremovable. Their shock waves have also upset the relations of Arab countries with other states in the world. It is this fundamental and yet little explored question that this book addresses on the repercussions of the Arab revolutions on a regional and international scale, through the examples of Turkey, Iran, Russia, Israel and from China. Each of the chapters of the first part thus offers an off-centre look at the revolutionary processes still at work. The second part of the book allows a completely different shift. By focusing on the media and on the artistic scene, it is a profound reformulation of political discourses and practices that the contributors to this work bring to light. And this, for questions as central as the practices of Islam, the capacities of engagement, and conversely the perpetuation of the logics of obedience. Finally, this book explores, in its last section, the social and spatial transformations on which the revolutions have shed new light: how the liberalization policy led by the al-Assad regime has contributed to the outbreak of violence in Syria. ; how the migrations of workers in the Maghreb, the Middle East and the Gulf have influenced the transformation of Arab regimes; how, lastly, the revolutions changed the relationship of the Egyptians to the public space and of the Libyans to their territory.
Government - Non-U.S. --- Law, Politics & Government --- Government - Asia --- islamisme --- Israël --- Tunisie --- jeunesse --- Jordanie --- Syrie --- Égypte --- sémantique textuelle --- Bahreïn --- Baas --- Libye --- médias --- Alaouites --- communauté internationale --- Iran --- autoritarisme --- migration --- confessionalisme --- Réseaux sociaux --- Turquie --- Arab countries --- Politics and government --- islamisme --- Israël --- Tunisie --- jeunesse --- Jordanie --- Syrie --- Égypte --- sémantique textuelle --- Bahreïn --- Baas --- Libye --- médias --- Alaouites --- communauté internationale --- Iran --- autoritarisme --- migration --- confessionalisme --- Réseaux sociaux --- Turquie
Choose an application
Revolutions in the Arab world have not only shaken or brought down regimes deemed irremovable. Their shock waves have also upset the relations of Arab countries with other states in the world. It is this fundamental and yet little explored question that this book addresses on the repercussions of the Arab revolutions on a regional and international scale, through the examples of Turkey, Iran, Russia, Israel and from China. Each of the chapters of the first part thus offers an off-centre look at the revolutionary processes still at work. The second part of the book allows a completely different shift. By focusing on the media and on the artistic scene, it is a profound reformulation of political discourses and practices that the contributors to this work bring to light. And this, for questions as central as the practices of Islam, the capacities of engagement, and conversely the perpetuation of the logics of obedience. Finally, this book explores, in its last section, the social and spatial transformations on which the revolutions have shed new light: how the liberalization policy led by the al-Assad regime has contributed to the outbreak of violence in Syria. ; how the migrations of workers in the Maghreb, the Middle East and the Gulf have influenced the transformation of Arab regimes; how, lastly, the revolutions changed the relationship of the Egyptians to the public space and of the Libyans to their territory.
Government - Non-U.S. --- Law, Politics & Government --- Government - Asia --- Arab countries --- Politics and government --- islamisme --- Israël --- Tunisie --- jeunesse --- Jordanie --- Syrie --- Égypte --- sémantique textuelle --- Bahreïn --- Baas --- Libye --- médias --- Alaouites --- communauté internationale --- Iran --- autoritarisme --- migration --- confessionalisme --- Réseaux sociaux --- Turquie
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