A revolution of dignity and poetry

The most famous slogan chanted in Tunisia in January, then in Egypt, Yemen, Libya, and Syria, is a reincarnation of opening lines of the poem "The Will of Life," written in 1933 by the Tunisian poet Abou el-Kasem Chebbi (1909-1934), which now form the closing part of Tunisia's nationa...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Omri, M
Format: Journal article
Language:English
Published: 2012
_version_ 1797055185089986560
author Omri, M
author_facet Omri, M
author_sort Omri, M
collection OXFORD
description The most famous slogan chanted in Tunisia in January, then in Egypt, Yemen, Libya, and Syria, is a reincarnation of opening lines of the poem "The Will of Life," written in 1933 by the Tunisian poet Abou el-Kasem Chebbi (1909-1934), which now form the closing part of Tunisia's national anthem and have been sung by some of the most influential Arab stars, written on protest banners, and shouted by students in the face of French and English occupiers and their own governments. The couplet even entered the folklore of global protest music and poetry, and was adopted by the International Solidarity Movement. On January 14, 2011, in front of the forbidding Ministry of the Interior in Tunis, crowds shouted their version of the poem - "The people want to bring down the regime" - and fate responded. One key feature of the system during Ben Ali's rule was a duality or parallel existence of two opposing systems of values and cultural production. One was dominant, while the other was repressed but survived in various forms and in uneven ways. The present essay is, in part, the story of that survival and eventual victory. I draw on printed material, extensive fieldwork, and personal observation in Tunisia and Egypt, personal recordings, interviews, the media, and Internet sites in an attempt to provide a more complex story of culture during and before the wave of revolts, particularly in Tunisia. © 2012 by Mohamed-Salah Omri.
first_indexed 2024-03-06T19:07:32Z
format Journal article
id oxford-uuid:15a9d9a9-2659-475c-b768-e151a967ee45
institution University of Oxford
language English
last_indexed 2024-03-06T19:07:32Z
publishDate 2012
record_format dspace
spelling oxford-uuid:15a9d9a9-2659-475c-b768-e151a967ee452022-03-26T10:26:43ZA revolution of dignity and poetryJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:15a9d9a9-2659-475c-b768-e151a967ee45EnglishSymplectic Elements at Oxford2012Omri, MThe most famous slogan chanted in Tunisia in January, then in Egypt, Yemen, Libya, and Syria, is a reincarnation of opening lines of the poem "The Will of Life," written in 1933 by the Tunisian poet Abou el-Kasem Chebbi (1909-1934), which now form the closing part of Tunisia's national anthem and have been sung by some of the most influential Arab stars, written on protest banners, and shouted by students in the face of French and English occupiers and their own governments. The couplet even entered the folklore of global protest music and poetry, and was adopted by the International Solidarity Movement. On January 14, 2011, in front of the forbidding Ministry of the Interior in Tunis, crowds shouted their version of the poem - "The people want to bring down the regime" - and fate responded. One key feature of the system during Ben Ali's rule was a duality or parallel existence of two opposing systems of values and cultural production. One was dominant, while the other was repressed but survived in various forms and in uneven ways. The present essay is, in part, the story of that survival and eventual victory. I draw on printed material, extensive fieldwork, and personal observation in Tunisia and Egypt, personal recordings, interviews, the media, and Internet sites in an attempt to provide a more complex story of culture during and before the wave of revolts, particularly in Tunisia. © 2012 by Mohamed-Salah Omri.
spellingShingle Omri, M
A revolution of dignity and poetry
title A revolution of dignity and poetry
title_full A revolution of dignity and poetry
title_fullStr A revolution of dignity and poetry
title_full_unstemmed A revolution of dignity and poetry
title_short A revolution of dignity and poetry
title_sort revolution of dignity and poetry
work_keys_str_mv AT omrim arevolutionofdignityandpoetry
AT omrim revolutionofdignityandpoetry