Australia/Israel Review


The Biblio File: Facebook Fail

Jun 10, 2015 | Alexander H. Joffe

The Biblio File: Facebook Fail
news_item/fullres-67.jpeg

The New Arabs: How the Millennial Generation Is Changing the Middle East
by Juan Cole, Simon & Schuster, 2014. 368 pp. US$26.

 

Alexander H. Joffe

 

This new book by the ever-controversial Prof. Juan Cole of the University of Michigan is yet another example of his scholarship and prognostications about a Middle East that just will not stay pegged to standard leftist tropes. In this case, Cole attempts to capture the significance of the so-called Arab spring, which he believes to be an earth-shattering phenomenon. But his theories have been decisively overtaken by events.

Cole presents a personal travelogue through the upheavals that began in late 2010 by way of leading “millennial” figures with a focus on “Internet activism” and social media. His thesis is that the youth, along with an amorphous “New Left”, led the way during these uprisings and that together they forever changed the Arab and Muslim worlds, a dubious assessment. 

Cole’s first failing is through his highly selective approach to social media, quoting Facebook posts, blogs, and tweets he finds informative. But rather than take a quantitative approach that would actually measure large-scale social and intellectual trends, his method is traditional and impressionistic. Relying on informants and observations during his travels in Egypt, Tunisia and Libya, he focuses on select individuals whom he believes important, whether or not they represent anything or anyone beyond themselves.

Second, Cole latches onto the term “millennial,” using it to describe a progressive, social media-savvy generation dissatisfied with the stagnant status quo of republics and military states. But the media-savvy youth of the uprisings were not exclusively liberal.

Nowhere does Cole take the religious right seriously – in its hard form (Muslim Brotherhood) or harsher strains (Islamic State of Iraq and Syria [ISIS], etc.) – nor does he emphasise that the Brotherhood, for example, made extensive use of the Internet for its own, exceedingly illiberal purposes throughout this chaotic period. Social media goes on, but now it is ISIS tweeting its latest crucifixions and mass executions.

Third, he seems unaware that the military and the religious right, which have cracked down on Internet freedom and punished critics severely, are ascendant today. As for the liberal-minded youth who flocked to Tahrir Square and other confrontations, their disappointment is palpable and justified, but it is unclear when, how, or if they will re-emerge as a meaningful social force. 

The historical moment Cole attempts to describe has passed; the millennial generation he hoped would change the Middle East, if it ever truly existed, is numbed and in retreat. Alas, he seems oblivious to both these facts.

Dr. Alexander H. Joffe is an archaeologist and historian and is Shillman-Ginsburg Fellow at the Middle East Forum. Reprinted from Middle East Quarterly (www.meforum.org/meq). © Middle East Forum, reprinted by permission, all rights reserved.

 

Tags:

RELATED ARTICLES

UNRWA is portrayed as the “backbone” of Gaza aid efforts, but actually supplied only 13% of aid there over recent months (Image: Anas Mohammed/ Shutterstock)

An empire of perpetual suffering

Nov 20, 2024 | Australia/Israel Review
Foreign Minister Penny Wong and PM Anthony Albanese have degraded our relationship with our most important Middle Eastern partner (Screenshot)

The consequences of Australia’s Mideast policy shifts since October 7

Nov 20, 2024 | Australia/Israel Review
An extension of the Abraham Accords that saw a string of Middle Eastern countries making peace with Israel is likely to be a priority (Image: Whitehouse.gov/ Flickr)

Trump and the Middle East

Nov 20, 2024 | Australia/Israel Review
French UNIFIL soldiers in southern Lebanon (Image: Shutterstock)

Lebanon: Optimism and obstacles

Nov 20, 2024 | Australia/Israel Review
Rabbi Genende (3rd from left) with Christian and Muslim delegates at the Abrahamic Peace Working Group conference in Bandung, Indonesia

The Last Word: Abrahamic angst and aspirations

Nov 20, 2024 | Australia/Israel Review
Image: Shutterstock

Media Microscope: Resolutionary change

Nov 20, 2024 | Australia/Israel Review