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SECULAR PRESS (1) answer(s).
 
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ID:   094823


Other frontiers of Arab nationalism: Ibadis, Berbers, and the Arabist - Salafi press in the interwar period / Ghazal, Amal N   Journal Article
Ghazal, Amal N Journal Article
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Publication 2010.
Summary/Abstract The historiography of Arab nationalism has tended to concentrate on the secular press from the Mashriq, especially the Cairo-Beirut axis, at the expense of the religious nationalist press and the non-Mashriqi one. There is often an assumption that reliance on the secular press from the Mashriq alone can provide a clear picture of Arab intellectual life and that a proper analysis of that thought can be confined to a few intellectual centers in the eastern Arab world. Although there has never been an explicit claim that such a focus is the end of the story, there have not been enough attempts to look beyond the Cairo-Beirut axis and beyond its secular press organs in search of a broader story of the depth and breadth of Arab nationalism. This article addresses this imbalance by examining an Arabist-Salafi press network that operated between Algeria, Tunisia, Zanzibar, and Egypt and involved members of two sectarian communities, Sunnis and Ibadis. This Arabist-Salafi press network created a public sphere of intellectual engagement in which Salafism and nationalism were interwoven, producing a nationalist discourse transgressing post World War I borders of identity and linking the three layers of nationalism-the territorial, the Pan-Arab, and the Pan-Islamic-together. These layers not only intersected but also legitimized one another.
Key Words Nationalism  Egypt  Arab Nationalism  Arab  Secular Press  Nationalist Press 
Salafism  Pan-Arab 
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