Revolutions can be messy. They can be tragic. As long as the Internet is
working, they can be tweeted. And, as Egyptians demonstrated during their 18
days of protest, they can also be funny.

In the English-language press, the post-game wrap-up of Egypt's uprising has
largely focused on therole of new
media<http://english.aljazeera.net/programmes/empire/2011/02/201121614532116986.html>
tools
(as well as old ones, namely satellite television), which allowed people to
connect, organize and inform. Absent from most of this analysis was an
examination of one of the oldest and most subversive political tools there
is: humor. The steady stream of comedy flowing throughout the square
functioned much as Twitter and Facebook did: to build community, strengthen
solidarity, and provide a safe, thug-free outlet for Egyptians to defy the
regime.

Parody, Linda Hutcheons has written, repeats something familiar, but with a
"potentially 
revolutionary<http://books.google.com/books?id=FoHXjEauvKIC&printsec=frontcover&dq=theory+of+parody&source=bl&ots=JOjpKiHQ75&sig=fnXmSKyZWZSmWH29aZKpPYhf_a8&hl=en&ei=Z1pZTcz_F4bKgQeiuoiKDQ&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=5&ved=0CEMQ6AEwBA#v=onepage&q&f=false>"
difference. For Egyptians, did it get any more familiar than Hosni Mubarak,
whose rule lasted 29 long years? Whose Dracula-like face peered down from
signs and framed official photographs all over the country (photographs that
seemed to freeze him in the Twilight Zone of his mid-fifties, where his hair
color still remains)? Who greeted them every morning from their state
television and state-owned newspapers? As Issandr El Amrani asked in his eerily
prescient 
article<http://www.foreignpolicy.com/articles/2011/01/02/three_decades_of_a_joke_that_just_wont_die?page=full>
on Mubarak 
jokes<http://www.foreignpolicy.com/articles/2011/01/02/making_fun_of_pharaoh>
written
for Foreign Policy two months before the revolution began: What would happen
if you spent three decades making fun of the same man?

To Mahmoud Salem, an English-language blogger who goes by the name
Sandmonkey <http://www.sandmonkey.org/> (because it "makes white people
uncomfortable"), those 30 years of non-stop derision -- including an
Onion-esque fake news website, El Koshary Today <http://www.elkoshary.com/> --
set the stage for the confrontation that began January 25. Directly
confronting the regime, he told me, would have been a "stupid move."

"It's easier to make them look ridiculous," Salem said. But is humor, as
some suggest, a substitute for effective political action? "It's very
effective," he insisted, "because it breaks the fear barrier."

That barrier began to fall not long after Tunisian President Zine el-Abidine
Ben Ali resigned office on January 14. Egyptians roared into the street,
kicking off their revolution with
chants<http://www.nybooks.com/blogs/nyrblog/2011/jan/26/hosni-mubarak-plane-waiting/>
of
"Hosni Mubarak, the plane is waiting!" a nod to Ben Ali's embarrassingly
swift liftoff to Saudi Arabia.

The longer Mubarak stayed, the more the jokes piled up, much like the
growing mound of trash <http://yfrog.com/gy1mzycj> in the center of Tahrir
Square. Protesters renamed both the garbage pile and the
toilets<http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-12434787> renamed
"National Democratic Party headquarters" -- a reference to Mubarak's party,
the real headquarters of which was destroyed by protesters. When Vice
President Omar Suleiman denounced the protesters' "foreign
agendas<http://www.ongo.com/v/368780/-1/BCC00FE660700A11/regime-wont-halt-but-rallies-must-egypts-vp-says>,"
young people showed up to the square with plain blank notebooks, Salem says.
"Whoops," they told one another, "I left my 'agenda' at home."

When state television
accused<http://articles.latimes.com/2011/feb/07/world/la-fg-egypt-kentucky-20110208>
protesters
of being foreign agents, paid with fistfuls of Euros and meals from Kentucky
Fried Chicken, one protester
filmed<http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gNAKEGT15Ig&feature=youtube_gdata>
his
comrades enjoying their "KFC": humble sandwiches of bread and cheese. And
that $100 bribe? "I transferred it to Switzerland," one grinning man tells
the camera, falafel in hand.

As Egyptians took to social media to spread news from the demonstrations and
encourage others to join them, the humor rampant in the street made it into
those social media dispatches as well. Many tweeted in English, and thanks
to translation software and human translators, the whole world could get in
on the joke.

contd....

http://www.theatlantic.com/international/archive/2011/02/laugh-o-revolution-humor-in-the-egyptian-uprising/71530/1/
-- 
Adv Kamayani Bali Mahabal
+919820749204
skype-lawyercumactivist
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