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.
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.
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.