Skip to main content Skip to main navigation menu Skip to site footer

The Ordinariness of Ethics and the Extraordinariness of Revolution: Ethical Selves and the Egyptian January Revolution at Home and School

By Ramy Aly

HTML PDF EPUB
Cite As:
Aly, Ramy. 2024. “The Ordinariness of Ethics and the Extraordinariness of Revolution: Ethical Selves and the Egyptian January Revolution at Home and School.” Cultural Anthropology 39, no. 1: 146–169. https://doi.org/10.14506/ca39.1.07.

Abstract

In this article I present experiences of Egyptians too young to have taken part in the street protests and movement of the 2011 revolution. Today in their early twenties, they narrate their experiences during the early months of the uprising. None claimed to be revolutionaries then or now, but the revolution seems to animate them in complex and long-lasting ways. The January revolution failed to bring about change at the level of state power. Yet more is at stake than the political endgame. I turn my attention to how people narrate the revolution as a process of ethical reflection and self-formation through everyday relationships and settings that took on new meanings. These accounts challenge notions of what it means to participate in a revolution and where it is located and generate a conversation between the anthropology of ethics and the anthropology of revolutions.

Keywords

January revolution; Egypt; family and relatedness; anthropology of revolution; anthropology of ethics; moral breakdown; ethical self-formation

Copyright

Copyright (c) 2024 Ramy Aly Creative Commons License

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License.