Aaron Rock-Singer is a fellow at the Harvard Kennedy School’s Middle East Initiative. He has published two fantastic books, “Practicing Islam: Egypt’s Islamic Revival” and “In the Shade of the Sunna: Salafi Piety in the Twentieth-Century Middle East”.
Aaron is truly brilliant, connecting both the macro and the micro. By examining structural shifts in education and urbanisation as well as Islamic print media, he shows how modernisation triggered counter-mobilisation.
We discuss:
How did colonialism change religiosity and religious practices in Egypt?
Why were post-independence leaders relatively secular?
What was the Islamic revival? What was new?
Did the 1970s economic downturn raise support Islamists?
Why was there a global religious revival in the 1970s?
Why was female behaviour so central to religious revival?
Would Egypt’s Islamic revival have occurred in the absence of Saudi funding and migration?
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