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SELLING SUCCESS, NURTURING THE SELF: SELF-HELP LITERATURE, CAPITALIST VALUES, AND THE SACRALIZATION OF SUBJECTIVE LIFE IN EGYPT
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 14 October 2015
Abstract
The growing strength of self-help literature in Egypt represents a new cultural expression of accommodation with capitalism, and markedly expands the mix of modern ideas and ethical practices rendered legitimate through association with tradition. The ideas and practices found in self-help, however, are anything but traditional. In its style and content, self-help expresses the values of individualism and neoliberal understandings of subjectivity. Informed by modern insights into the self and its formation, the genre blurs the boundary between psychology and religion, valorizing the process of self-exploration and self-fulfillment. The inherent message of self-help is not simply the glorification of the individual but, more pointedly, the sacralization of the self and subjective life choices—an interpretive trend that, in Egypt, simultaneously functionalizes Islam and fosters new understandings of what it means to be Muslim.
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Author's note: I thank the IJMES anonymous reviewers for their insightful comments. Support for this project was kindly provided by DePauw University and by the Great Lakes Colleges Association as part of its New Directions Initiative, made possible by a grant from the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation.
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