Exploitation and instrumentalization of women’s rights.- Combining public sphere and intersectional theory.- Post-colonial regimes in Tunisia.- Intersectional analysis of transformation, including political institutions, media and associations after the uprisings of 2011.
Dr. Anna Antonakis is a researcher and consultant in the field of Gender, Media and Security. She investigated the Tunisian transformation process from 2013-2016 as a doctoral fellow at the SWP.
Anna Antonakis’ analysis of the Tunisian transformation process (2011-2014) displays how negotiations of gender initiating new political orders do not only happen in legal and political institutions but also in media representations and on a daily basis in the family and public space. While conventionalized as a “model for the region”, this book outlines how the Tunisian transformation missed to address social inequalities and local marginalization as much as substantial challenges of a secular but conservative gender order inscribed in a Western hegemonic concept of modernity. She introduces the concept of “dissembled secularism” to explain major conflict lines in the public sphere and the exploitation of gender politics in a context of post-colonial dependencies.
Contents
Exploitation and instrumentalization of women’s rights
Combining public sphere and intersectional theory
Post-colonial regimes in Tunisia
Intersectional analysis of transformation, including political institutions, media and associations after the uprisings of 2011
Target Groups
Researchers and students in political science with a special interest in political communication, intersectional approaches and the study of societies in transformation
Scholars, activists and diplomats interested in the “Arab Spring” and North Africa
The Author
Dr. Anna Antonakis is a researcher and consultant in the field of Gender, Media and Security. She investigated the Tunisian transformation process from 2013-2016 as a doctoral fellow at the SWP.