@article{Kilani_2015, title={Les formes de l’action politique dans la révolution tunisienne}, volume={3}, url={https://rivisteclueb.it/index.php/etnoantropologia/article/view/180}, DOI={10.1473/180}, abstractNote={<p class="p1">The outbreak of the “Arab revolutions” took the whole world by surprise. These were nothing like earlier revolutions. They made no demands in the name of religion or ideology. They had no apparent leaders, sponsors or charismatic figures. In this contribution, I would  like to address the following questions: How did the erstwhile “disorganized” and “subjugated” Tunisian multitude discover its power and reclaim its capacity to act? How did it transform itself into a historical subject? How the different voices cooperated in order to elaborate new organization forms? My answers are sustained by a field research I have developed in a recent publication (Kilani 2014).</p>}, number={1}, journal={EtnoAntropologia}, author={Kilani, Mondher}, year={2015}, month={ago.}, pages={65–71} }