South Yemen's Independence Struggle

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A01=Anne-Linda Amira Augustin
A01=Dr. Anne-Linda Amira Augustin
Advocacy
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al- Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula
al-Jumhuriya al-'Arabiya al-Yamaniya
Anne-Linda Amira Augustin
Anthropology
Arab uprisings
Author_Anne-Linda Amira Augustin
Author_Dr. Anne-Linda Amira Augustin
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Category1=Non-Fiction
Category=JHMC
Category=JPSL
Category=JPVR
Category=JPWQ
Category=JPZ
Colonialism
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Cultural
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eq_nobargain
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eq_society-politics
ethnographic
History
Independent state
Jumhuriyat al-Yaman al- Dimuqratiya al- Sha'biya
Jumhuriyat al-Yaman al- Dimuqratiya al- Sha‘biya
Language_English
mass protest
Middle East
Nationalism
OHiraak al-Janaubai
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PDRY
Political Science
Post-Colonialism
Price_€50 to €100
Process
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Republic
Social
softlaunch
Southern Movement
statehood
YAR
Yemen

Product details

  • ISBN 9781649031082
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 30 Nov 2021
  • Publisher: American University in Cairo Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
  • Language: English
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A bold firsthand account of one of the persistent Arab uprisings, in Yemen

At its beginning in 2007, the Southern Movement in South Yemen was a loose merger of different people, most of them former army personnel and state employees of the People’s Democratic Republic of Yemen (PDRY) who were forced from their jobs after the war in 1994, only four years after the unification between the PDRY and the Yemen Arab Republic.

This bold ethnographic account of a persistent Arab uprising, in a rarely studied corner of the Middle East, explores why the Southern Movement has grown so tremendously during the last decade, and how it developed from a primarily social movement demanding social rights into a mass protest movement claiming independence for a state that had long vanished from the world map. Anne-Linda Amira Augustin asks why so many young people born after 1990 joined the movement and demanded the re-establishment of a state that they had never themselves experienced.

At the core of South Yemeni resistance lies the transmission from generation to generation of a dominant counternarrative, which may be seen as the continuation and rehabilitation of the PDRY’s national narrative. This narrative, amplified through everyday communication in families and neighborhoods, but also by media-makers, journalists, school and university teachers, civil society actors, and by the movement’s activists, opposes the national-unity narrative of the Republic of Yemen and intensifies the demands for an independent state.

Anne-Linda Amira Augustin is a political advisor to the European Representative Office of the Southern Transitional Council, a non-resident scholar at the Middle East Institute in Washington, DC, and a board member of the Academic Forum Muhammad Ali Luqman in Berlin, Germany.