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Sara Salem, Anticolonial Afterlives in Egypt: The Politics of Hegemony. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press (hb £83.99 – 978 1 108 49151 8; pb £25.99 – 978 1 108 79838 9). 2020, 294 pp.

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Sara Salem, Anticolonial Afterlives in Egypt: The Politics of Hegemony. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press (hb £83.99 – 978 1 108 49151 8; pb £25.99 – 978 1 108 79838 9). 2020, 294 pp.

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  27 May 2024

Hossam el-Hamalawy*
Affiliation:
Egyptian journalist and scholar-activist, Germany
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Abstract

Type
Reviews
Copyright
© The Author(s), 2024. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of the International African Institute

How can we explain the outbreak of the 2011 revolution in Egypt? Some scholars have been content to highlight the role of social media, attributing such a monumental event to the spread of Web 2.0 tools. Others have focused on divisions within the regime’s ruling class on how to manage the neoliberal transition. More nuanced approaches have situated the revolt within a rising social movement that started a decade earlier, with the second Palestinian intifada.

Sara Salem’s fascinating piece of scholarly work, however, goes back as far as 1952 to explain how the scene was set for the 2011 uprising. Why would the search for the roots of a revolt in 2011 take us on a journey back to the mid-twentieth century, when an eclectic group of nationalist army officers overthrew the British-backed monarchy and founded Egypt’s first republican order?

Drawing on the works of Antonio Gramsci and Frantz Fanon, Salem argues that Nasser’s era was the only moment of ‘hegemony’ in Egypt’s modern history. The officers managed to form a ‘historical block’ where a ruling class successfully sold its vision to the wider public, enabling Nasser to rule primarily by consent and build a wide class alliance that responded to the nationalist and social aspirations of workers, farmers, the middle classes and sections of local capital.

In pulling together such a hegemonic project, Salem further explains, Egypt’s case challenges some of Fanon’s reflections on the postcolonial bourgeoisie as incapable of severing ties of dependency on the imperial centre. In fact, Nasser’s Egypt did. Such hegemony does not mean that coercion was not employed. The Free Officers, after all, inaugurated their rule by cracking down on industrial strikers in Kafr el-Dawwar and executing two communist workers. This was followed by the establishment of a labyrinth of security services, which did not hesitate to arrest, torture and kill dissidents. But Salem makes it clear that Nasser’s rule, at least until the catastrophic 1967 defeat in the war with Israel, rested primarily on consent.

Salem explores the role of ideology that helped cement this historical block, and the institutions that fostered the ‘Nasserist project’, politically, socially and economically. By the mid-1960s, small cracks had started to appear in this regime, when, following the end of the first Five Year Plan, prices of basic commodities increased, and some concessions were made to the private sector. But it was the 1967 war that struck the hardest blow to the Nasserist ruling class’s ability to rule by consent.

The shocking defeat eroded the hegemony of the ruling class. It is not a coincidence that the revival of the student and labour movements was to commence in 1968. And neither was it a coincidence that the militarization of the police and the establishment of the Central Security Forces ensued immediately afterwards, as the ruling class gradually resorted to coercion to maintain its control. Ideology was not enough any more.

Anwar Sadat’s rise to power in 1971 and his ‘corrective revolution’, which purged the Nasserist centres of power from the country, would put Egypt on the road to a neoliberal transition. And it is with Sadat that the postcolonial dependent bourgeoisie took shape, Salem argues, building on Fanon’s theory. The ruling class was never a static group, with changing alliances and different groups not necessarily having an equal share of power in the ruling coalition.

Yet what Salem meticulously explains is that the ruling class(es) from 1967 to 2011 failed to form a historical block that could sell its vision to the wider public, and thus failed to create hegemony. Thus, both Sadat’s and Hosni Mubarak’s regimes had no other tools to maintain their rule but coercion. Both depended on the Interior Ministry to aggressively police every aspect of citizens’ lives and both unleashed a wave of state violence that targeted not only dissidents but also other groups and individuals who were not necessarily politicized or opposed to the regime.

The absence of consent in favour of coercion, the failure to form a historical block and the erosion of hegemony, Salem argues, paved the road to the 2011 revolution.

Parts of the book are also devoted to the opposition – namely, the Islamists and the left. In these sections, Salem investigates the reasons behind their failure to become a ‘counter-hegemonic’ force, and how this ultimately crippled their ability to present a viable alternative before and after the 2011 revolution.

Salem’s thesis on hegemony holds well in explaining Nasser’s consolidation of power and his successors’ inability to rule without coercion. But one issue that probably deserves rethinking is the extent to which the Nasserist project confronted the global capitalist order. Nationalizations to prop up the state capitalist order, the adoption of import substitution schemes, and the quest to encourage exports and find new markets for local products simply meant that the new Nasserist elite was actively trying to integrate into the global capitalist system, not confront it. State-led industrialization plans were popular throughout the global South in the same era, not just in Egypt. And virtually all of these states at later stages liberalized their economies in one form or another, in many cases at the hands of the same rulers who had devised state capitalist plans under the banner of ‘socialism’. This should make us contemplate whether Nasserism was doomed to failure, regardless of the 1967 defeat or the eventual rise of Sadat.

Salem’s book is a recommended read, not only for Marxists and scholars of postcolonial theory, but also for anyone who seeks to understand the potential as well as the failures of revolutionary transformation in one of the largest countries in the global South.