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‘Who would go to Egypt?’ How tourism accounts for ‘terrorism’

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  21 February 2012

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Abstract

This article examines the tension between British and Egyptian counterterrorism discourses and Western tourism industry discourses. I analyse how guidebooks like the Rough Guide and Lonely Planet attract tourists by representing Egypt as an appealing tourist destination in a way that accounts for its positioning, in counterterrorism discourses, as a location and source of terrorism. They do so by producing ‘risk’ in a very specific way. Guidebook representations construct one extreme of Egyptian society as ‘bad’ Muslims who pose an essential threat to Western tourists and their inherently progressive liberal democratic values. Having defined risk in this way, guidebooks justify the production of ‘states of exception’ and ‘exceptional states’ that exclude ‘bad’ Muslims and protect Western tourists. These strategies function together to construct Egypt as non-threatening and appealing to tourists. I argue that guidebooks not only account for terrorism but represent Egypt in a way that largely reinforces British and Egyptian ‘war on terror’ strategies. These strategies similarly protect subjects and spaces that uphold Western liberal democratic values. This article highlights the constitutive role of tourism in international politics and simultaneously helps us better understand the complex and mundane means by which the current Western liberal order is (re)produced.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © British International Studies Association 2011

This article looks at British tourism to EgyptFootnote 1 and asks the question: Who would go to Egypt? Who would go to Egypt when Britain's counterterrorism strategy positions Egypt as a primary origin of inspiration and planning for international terrorism?Footnote 2 Who would go to Egypt when the Egyptian government itself frequently highlights threats from terrorism?Footnote 3 Interestingly, explicit links established between international terrorism and Egypt have not greatly deterred British tourism to this country. In 2006, British tourists represented the highest proportion of visitors to Egypt. Since then, the UK has remained amongst the top three source countries.Footnote 4 Timothy Mitchell argues that mass tourism, as against mass production, involves the organisation of people to consume rather than produce.Footnote 5 As such it is the imperative of travel texts that benefit from this industry to produce a community of consumers through their representations of destinations. Travel texts must negotiate the tension between counterterrorism discourses that paint Egypt as a hotbed of terrorist activity, and their need to attract customers.

What I am interested in exploring is how British tourism texts, such as guidebooks, represent Egypt as an appealing tourist destination in a way that accounts for its positioning as a location and source of terrorism. I argue in this article that guidebooks use two strategies that work together to represent Egypt as a destination attractive to British tourists. They lay the groundwork for these strategies by producing ‘risk’Footnote 6 in a very specific way. Guidebook representations of Egyptian spaces and subject construct one extreme of society as ‘bad’ Muslims. These ‘bad’ Muslims adhere to a form of Islam that is essentially threatening to Western tourists and their inherently progressive Western liberal democratic values. These values include the recognition of individual rights and freedoms, representative government, and the rule of law, within a free market system. They are characterised as ‘Western’ not with reference solely to geography but in the sense that they are associated with, and have been used historically to (re)produce, a ‘West’ and ‘Western’ subjects that are privileged and protected in relation to correspondingly constructed ‘others’. Post-colonial theorists draw attention to the co-constitution of the so-called West and non-West, not only in terms of how the former has been defined in hierarchical opposition with the latter, but in terms of how they have selectively appropriated each others’ ideas and practices.Footnote 7

Having defined risk in this way, the first strategy guidebooks use to attract Western tourists is to justify Egyptian government measures that protect these tourists by locating ‘bad’ Muslims in ‘states of exception’, where their legal, political, and economic rights are suspended. The second guidebook strategy is to locate Western tourists in ‘exceptional states’, (re)producing subject positions and reified spaces that are inherently privileged and protected as they ‘fit’ along a timeline that ends with Western liberal democracy. In the context of contemporary iterations of liberalism, these strategies function together to construct Egyptian spaces and subjects as non-threatening and appealing to tourists. Guidebooks thereby make risk known in a way that produces very specific solutions, justifying exceptions that privilege and protect the lives and rights of those seen as adhering to the values of Western liberal democracy.

These two strategies articulate intertextuallyFootnote 8 with tactics employed by UK and Egyptian counterterrorism discourses, which are part of the post 9/11 ‘war on terror’ discourse. These discourses similarly justify and produce ‘states of exception’ and ‘exceptional states’ that together protect subjects and spaces that uphold Western liberal democratic values. These mutually constructed ‘states’ reveal the complex logic of exception that acts as an underlying principle of Western liberal democracy, protecting its values and (re)producing a particular world order. I argue that guidebooks not only account for terrorism, but also represent Egypt in a way that largely reinforces the discourses of British and Egyptian counterterrorism strategies, revealing the constitutive role of tourism in international politics.

Producing discourse: articulation and representation

To make this argument I perform a post-structural discourse analysis of guidebooks and UK and Egyptian counterterrorism strategies. When I use the term ‘discourse’ I refer to systems of signification that (re)produce meanings about the social world, ordering its subjects and objects accordingly. I refer to the constituent parts of discourses as ‘elements’, which include a broad range of ‘materials’ including artefacts, sites, and practices. A discourse is produced when, in a particular context, dispersed elements come to share a regularity or logic in their meanings, coming to be related in a way that constitutes a partial fixity, taken as natural or true.Footnote 9 A discourse, though not arbitrary, is always unstable, incomplete and contingent, allowing for articulations to occur that may redirect or reinforce it.Footnote 10 The dominant tourism discourse, for instance, relies on binaries of home/away, tourist/local, authentic/commodified, work/leisure, and virtue/pleasure, which are reinforced within tourism scholarship and popular discourses.Footnote 11 Binaries function to differentiate two terms in a way that mutually defines them, often privileging one over the other. These binaries, many of which are embedded in colonial representations and social relations, shape people's understandings of themselves and the world, influencing their practices in ways that reinforce these logics.

Guidebook representations play a role in the production of these tourism discourses. In this article, I examine how guidebook representations also articulate with and reinforce other dominant discourses, specifically ‘war on terror’ discourses that protect a Western liberal order. By ‘articulation’ I refer to the process that partially fixes meaning by discursively linking the elements of discourses, making them intelligible through chains of connotations with other discourses, and in the process altering their identity as the relation between them produces new meanings.Footnote 12 Representational practices are one way that meanings are partially fixed through the articulation and repetition of particular truths in a specific context. Jutta Weldes argues that through the process of articulation, elements of discourses are recombined to produce ‘contingent and contextually specific representations of the world’ that give its elements particular meanings. Through the repetition of these representations, these meanings become naturalised, shaping the way that people understand and act in the world.Footnote 13 In examining representational practices I am not, however, trying to find the ‘reality’ behind them but understand them rather as constitutive. As Edward W. Said argues, ‘there is no such thing as a delivered presence, but a re-presence, or a representation’,Footnote 14 contending that objects and subjects do not pre-exist their constitution through representational practices.

For the purposes of this article I define representational practices broadly. My discourse analysis examines not only textual and visual representations, such as the words and images found in guidebooks, but also the practices of policymaking and the organisation of spaces that function to represent Egypt. Specifically it analyses the Lonely Planet: Egypt (LP) and The Rough Guide: Egypt (RG),Footnote 15 two of the most popular guidebooks in the world.Footnote 16 These texts are produced by and for Western, and mainly British, tourists; they are published in the UKFootnote 17 and reveal their audience by, among other things, citing travel advisories from the Australian, British, Canadian, New Zealand, Irish, and US governments as recommended pre-departure reading.Footnote 18 Guidebooks construct themselves as a mediator between tourists, their locations and local populations, taking the role of human guides,Footnote 19 but as Debbie Lisle points out these texts are not neutral but ‘framed in advance by the ethical vision of the company’.Footnote 20 This article analyses the corresponding logics and resonances in guidebooks’ textual and visual representations rather than how these are received and acted upon by tourists themselves. It was written in the context of extensive fieldwork in Cairo as part of a research project on the international politics of tourism.

To understand how guidebook representations articulate intertextually with those found in UK and Egyptian counterterrorism I study both primary and secondary sources. I examine UK counterterrorism discourse through a discursive analysis of the textual representational practices found in Pursue Prevent Protect Prepare, also known as CONTEST, the country's strategy for countering international terrorism, published by the British Home Office in 2009.Footnote 21 I analyse the representational practices of Egyptian counterterrorism by drawing on secondary sources that discuss the discourses (re)produced by the most recent Egyptian government and by economic elites.Footnote 22 To further explore Egyptian counterterrorism strategies I analyse a 2009 report from ‘The Special Rapporteur on the Promotion and Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms while Countering Terrorism’ (SRS).Footnote 23 The representations found in UK and Egyptian counterterrorism discourses articulate intertextually with guidebooks’ representations in the sense that the latter are made intelligible and reinforced not in isolation but through the meanings produced by the former.Footnote 24

In my analysis I seek to identify key intertextually articulated themes, logics or regularities, which produce the particular claims to truth or conditions of possibility that constitute a discourse. I also pay attention to complexities, instabilities, contradictions, and indeed exclusions, as well as whether and how these are reconciled.Footnote 25 In so doing I am not looking to characterise these articulated discourses as fixed, but rather to understand how they articulate in specific spatio-temporal contexts to produce very particular, contingent, and complex representations, with the associated asymmetries, boundaries, and exclusions they require and reproduce. Specifically I examine how current representations of Egyptian and tourist spaces and subjects in guidebooks articulate intertextually with UK and Egyptian counter-terror discourses to produce states of exception and exceptional states required to (re)produce the current Western liberal order.

Producing risk: representation of Egyptian spaces and subjects

Guidebooks depict Egypt as an appealing tourist destination, accounting for ‘terrorism’ in their representations of the specific subjects and spaces posing a risk to Western tourists. These representations shape how this risk is known and managed in a way that articulates intertextually with UK and Egyptian counterterrorism discourses and strategies. Guidebooks construct risk by highlighting two extremes of Egyptian society, one of which poses an inherent threat to Western tourists and their values. The RG highlights the oppositions between the ‘rich and poor, westernization and traditionalism, complacency and desperation’.Footnote 26 The LP guide similarly depicts one extreme of society as made up of those for whom ‘all is God's will’, that represent ‘traditional conservatism’, ‘reinforced by poverty’, and that foam at the mouth over the US's unwavering support for Israel. On the other extreme are those ‘who never set foot in a mosque until the day they are laid out in one’, who can afford to eat at McDonald's and regularly travel to the US.Footnote 27 Guidebooks thereby differentiate between these two extremes of Egyptian society based on their religiosity, which guidebooks connect with their class and level of support for the West.Footnote 28

Having constructed this duality, guidebooks go on to depict Islam,Footnote 29 and its associations with poverty and terrorism, in a way that suggests that those at the more religious extreme of society are inherently different from, and indeed threatening to, tourists. Both guidebooks highlight how Islam means ‘submission’,Footnote 31 and go on to describe how it ‘permeates’Footnote 31 or ‘pervades’Footnote 32 Egyptian life. The LP mentions twice how ‘it's there’Footnote 33 or ‘prevails’Footnote 34 at an ‘almost subconscious’Footnote 35 or ‘unconscious’ level.Footnote 36 In so doing guidebooks suggest an adherence to Islam that is automatic, passive – even innate – rather than rational. They associate the religious extreme of society with a form of Islam that is conservative and static. The RG historicises this form of Islam as a branch that broke from the West, discouraged innovation, and became static, in direct opposition to the ‘west's secularism and materialism’.Footnote 37 The assumptions behind the RG's characterisation of Islam articulate with much of Western liberal social theory, which is based on a narrative of progress and reason that associates the presence of religion in the political and public – rather than solely private – realm with reactionary backwardness and as an obstacle to modernisation.Footnote 38 The guidebook thereby suggests an inherent connection between this branch of Islam and economic backwardness, functioning to naturalise secularism and capitalism, key tenets of Western liberal democracy, as crucial to progress.

Guidebooks also suggest that terrorism is inherent to this form of Islam, depicting it as essentially violent, anti-Western, and requiring absolute compliance from its followers. The RG and LP identify the terrorist groups carrying out attacks in Egypt as motivated by a hatred for the West, non-Muslims, and the secular Egyptian state.Footnote 39 They outline how most of these attacks have taken place against Western tourists,Footnote 40 asserting that ‘jihadist militants do see any non-Muslim foreigner as a potential target’.Footnote 41 Guidebooks hold the Muslim Brotherhood and their ‘pro-Islamist family’ responsible for most attacks and highlight their links with al-Qaeda.Footnote 42

The LP partly contextualises terrorists’ grievances, arguing that Egypt's Islamists are a ‘political response to harsh socio-economic conditions’ and a repressive political system.Footnote 43 The guide highlights the work ethic and community spirit of the majority of Egyptians, thereby positioning them as ‘victims’ of underdevelopment who have been denied equality of opportunity.Footnote 44 However, the LP depicts Egypt's political and economic underdevelopment as wholly endogenous, due to the government's failure to fully implement economic liberalisation, ‘Western-style democracy’, and human rights.Footnote 45 By failing to question the goals of liberal democracy, the LP functions to locate Egypt as behind in a linear understanding of historical progression according to Western notions of development. Guidebook representations of terrorism in Egypt fail to contextualise Egypt's political and economic relationship with the West, which might mean admitting some Western complicity in terrorists’ grievances. They point out only that Egypt has become dependent on US aid,Footnote 46 which if anything positions the West as a benefactor. At the same time guidebooks obscure the role played by European powers to encourage debt in the nineteenth century, which led to the British occupation,Footnote 47 and the role of Western liberalisation policiesFootnote 48 since the 1990s,Footnote 49 which have increased the gap between rich and poor in Egypt.Footnote 50 Guidebook tourists are similarly positioned as unquestionably superior and altruistic benefactors who make sustainable consumer choices, starting with their choice of guidebook that recommends – and itself makes – financial donations to counteract the effects of underdevelopment.Footnote 51 In so doing guidebooks fail to question the role of Western tourism in colonialism and asymmetrical economic development,Footnote 52 instead naturalising individualised market-based solutions and charity to overcome underdevelopment. Without such contextualisation, terrorists’ violent anti-Western stance, and consequent violence towards tourists, are constructed as irrational and indeed essential to a form of Islam that requires automatic ‘submission’ from its followers. This essentialised threat, positioned as it is in opposition to the altruistic West and its subjects, functions to imply that the West and its tourists are economically and morally superior through their adherence to Western liberal values that emphasise rational thinking, secularism, and autonomy. Guidebooks’ representations of Egyptian subjects thereby make risk known in a very particular way, suggesting that, in Egyptian spaces, Western tourists are constantly under threat from an inherently violent and irrational sector of society.

Guidebook representations articulate intertextually with British and Egyptian counterterrorism discourses that construct similarly defined spaces and threatening subjects. CONTEST, the UK counterterrorism strategy released by the Home Office in 2009, defines and seeks to detect those states and citizens ‘vulnerable’ to radicalisation and involvement in international terrorism. CONTEST does not assume that all Muslims are terrorists but links a form of Islam – directly and indirectly connected with al-Qaeda and its ideologyFootnote 53 – with violence. It argues that this new form of international terrorism,Footnote 54 involving indiscriminate violence to cause maximum civilian casualties, has an explicitly religious agenda to establish a new world order as a duty to the Islamic faith.Footnote 55 CONTEST thereby articulates intertextually with guidebooks to identify and similarly define the specific spaces and subjects that pose a risk based on their adherence to a particular form of Islam. Any other CONTEST representations of potential terrorist states and subjects, which associate them with ‘underdevelopment’ and a hatred for the West and its values, therefore presuppose that they are Muslim.

Having established a form of Islam as the basis for terrorism, CONTEST follows the guidebooks’ approach of effacing Western complicity in the origins of international terrorism. It does so by explicitly asserting that, although al-Qaeda recruits members in the UK, the sources of inspiration and planning for terrorism are ‘overseas’.Footnote 56 It also directly connects states, and individuals’ ‘vulnerability’ to terrorist involvement with grievances related to their lower stage of political and economic development according to a Western liberal democratic model. However, like the LP, CONTEST identifies this underdevelopment as wholly endogenous to those (Muslim) states concerned, belying any Western involvement. Specifically, it contends that the origins of contemporary international terror networks lie in ‘fragile and failed states’ caused by ‘economic collapse, poor governance, the abuse of human rights’.Footnote 57 Meanwhile, those UK citizens vulnerable to radicalisation are identified as those (Muslims) who lack the opportunity to integrate due to social, economic, and political exclusions.Footnote 58 Although CONTEST recognises that these are partly due to racial and religious discrimination, it also associates such exclusions with what is ‘more generally a lack of affinity with and disconnect from family, community and state’, suggesting that more inherent factors contribute to Muslims’ lack of integration into modern, society.Footnote 59 Indeed, Shampa Biswas argues that, within Western secular discourse, religious fundamentalisms are often ‘presented as (traditionalist) reactions to the dislocations and alienations of modernity,’ connecting Islam with tradition and presupposing ‘progressive secularization’ according to the ideal of Western liberal democracy as the basis for modernisation.Footnote 60 Insofar as it identifies a form of Islam with innate violence connected with endogenous ‘underdevelopment’, CONTEST articulates intertextually with guidebooks to construct Islam as inherently backward according to Western standards of progress.

At the same time, CONTEST associates (Muslims’) vulnerability to terrorist involvement with an irrational hatred for the West and its rights, institutions and values. CONTEST outlines how (Muslim) states and citizens turn their local grievances into grievances against the West – and especially the US and UK – for causing or failing to remedy ‘conflict, failure and suffering’ in Islamic countries, arguing that the ‘terrorist narrative’ exploits such political events.Footnote 61 By effacing (almost) any Western responsibility for Muslim-terrorist grievances, and depicting the West as their target whether or not it intervenes in ‘conflicts, failure and suffering’, CONTEST suggests that targeting the West is irrational, and indeed based on an essential hatred for its rights, institutions, and values. According to this logic, anyone – or at least any Muslim – who criticises government policies and British values can be seen as ‘at risk’ of radicalisation, thereby foreclosing political dissent that is not based on prior acceptance of these policies and values. Indeed, CONTEST cites any support for ‘US military withdrawal from Islamic countries’ as an example of one of the ‘political goals associated with Al Qa'ida’. By stating that ‘it is from among those who … hold these views that terrorist groups are able to recruit and survive’,Footnote 62 CONTEST paints any (Muslims) who critique US and UK interventions as potential terrorists.

In so doing, CONTEST not only forecloses any British responsibility for Muslim-terrorist grievances but simultaneously depicts the UK as altruistic in its international role. CONTEST outlines the UK's goal to remove barriers to ‘vulnerable’ states, and citizens’ political, economic and social development and integration according to Western standards.Footnote 63 CONTEST therefore argues that Britain's response to terror ‘has at all times upheld the principles and values of the UK as a liberal democracy’,Footnote 64 which include ‘human rights, the rule of law, legitimate and accountable government, justice, freedom, tolerance and opportunity for all’.Footnote 65 In this way, the UK and its subjects are positioned as superior in their universally derived and applied values, requiring protection against those without such values. CONTEST, like the guidebooks, constructs risk in a way that represents British values and lives as under constant threat from states and subjects that submit to the dictates of an inherently violent, backward and anti-Western religion.Footnote 66

Like guidebooks and CONTEST, Egyptian counterterrorism discourses construct threatening spaces and subjects in ways that connect religion to violence and poverty. These discourses have been (re)produced by the most recent Egyptian government and economic elites both formally and informally, through local and national policies as well as more mundane discourses. Here I am not conflating economic elites with the state or vice versa, but rather identifying articulations between their representations that produce mutually constitutive discourses. The Mubarak government, for instance, positioned the government and country as under permanent threat of ‘destabilisation’ from, among other things, Islamist movements, such as the Muslim Brotherhood, and those linked to terrorist organisations such as al-Qaeda and Hezbollah, depicted as threatening to impede Egypt's move towards liberal democracy.Footnote 67 In opposition, the government represented itself as a preserver of ‘proper, as opposed to excessive or incorrect, Islam’,Footnote 68 a ‘moderate rational enlightened’ version of Islam that ‘is in the national interest’.Footnote 69 State discourses articulate with guidebook representations that, although critical of the government's failure to implement Western liberal democracy, specifically describe the Egyptian government as part of the less religious extreme of society. The RG and LP depict the Mubarak government as supportive of the West and of progress along secular lines, emphasising how it was part of Bush's ‘Coalition of the Willing’Footnote 70 and marginalises the Muslim Brotherhood.Footnote 71

Representations in recent Egyptian counterterrorism discourses imply an inherent link between Islamist movements, violence and poverty by associating all three with the ‘demographic masses’ and urban spaces. Government and economic elite discourses have connected the general population and urban spaces with crime, disorder, violent protest, lawlessness, and nuisances.Footnote 72 These depictions draw on representations of the Arab metropolis as ‘a terrorist risk factory that is necessarily “Islamic”’.Footnote 73 More specifically, Egyptian counterterrorism discourses have labelled such spaces as ‘ashwa'iyat’, a word used to identify the ‘slums, shantytowns and the self-made satellite cities of the poor’ and describe the people therein as ‘risky, “hazardous”, and errant figures’.Footnote 74

Reflecting guidebooks and CONTEST tactics, Egyptian counterterrorism discourses hold neither economic elites nor the state responsible for the grievances of these subjects and spaces, reinforcing the links made between Islam, poverty, and violence. Such discourses foreclose discussions of government corruption and the increasing gap between rich and poor as a result of liberalisation policies. Instead they rely on and celebrate the altruism of the benevolent privileged few as a source of financial redistribution, mainly in the form of soup kitchens and tables of food during Ramadan.Footnote 75 Eric Denis argues that this charity has become an ‘urban bourgeois value and a way of self-presentation essential to the image of a good citizen and good Muslim’.Footnote 76 In so doing, Egyptian counterterrorism discourses follow CONTEST in implying that any challenge to Egyptian state policies – currently applied by the Supreme Council of Armed Forces (SCAF) – are an indication of potential terrorism, limiting any dissent that challenges the government and its policies. Indeed, Egypt defines terrorists broadly as those ‘who are dangerous to public security and order’.Footnote 77 Amongst those arrested and detained for terrorism in Egypt include those with no clear link to terrorist violence, such as ‘internet bloggers critical of the government, human rights activists, members of the country's largest opposition group the Muslim Brotherhood, and journalists’.Footnote 78 By decontextualising poverty and violence, Egyptian counterterrorism discourses have positioned the government and economic elites as altruistic ‘liberals, or globalizers or democratizers’,Footnote 79 those implementing and emulating liberal democratic values under threat from an inherently violent general population. Although these discourses contradict guidebook and CONTEST representations that depict a failure to achieve Western liberal democracy as endogenous to the state concerned, the representations of all three articulate in the descriptions and strategies they use to identify and characterise risk.

Guidebooks, CONTEST, and Egyptian counterterrorism discourses identify risk with spaces and subjects represented as essentially different due to the nature of their Islamic faith. In so doing they articulate intertextually to construct the figure of the ‘bad’ Muslim that is an inherent threat to Western tourists, British citizens, and Egyptian elites. On the surface therefore guidebooks and CONTEST avoid simple tourist/host, British/Muslim dichotomies by differentiating between different sectors of Egyptian society and types of Muslims. What this more complex positioning of Egyptian and Muslim subjects allows for is a contingent articulation between three subject positions ‘under threat’ from corresponding figures and spaces of risk: the Egyptian elite subject, the Western tourist, and the British citizen, who are all similarly positioned through these discourses. The representation of two extremes of Egyptian society, rather than a homogeneous ‘other’, functions to produce inequalities as it (re)produces the superiority of detached Western tourists, the British state and Egyptian elites who take the responsibility to help ‘good’ Muslim ‘victims’ in a way that follows and entrenches ‘universal’ standards of development. The discourse of ‘good’ and ‘bad’ Muslims therefore makes known the threat in a way that positions Western liberal democracy, and those who successfully adhere to it, as superior in a way that is not territorially defined but based on shared values.

This discourse also reflects and contributes to post-9/11 ‘war on terror’ discourses, which have shifted from emphasising a clash between ‘civilisation’ and a ‘Barbarian Other’Footnote 80 to a concern with the battle between ‘moderate’ and ‘extremist’ Muslims, understood as those that strive towards and those that threaten Western liberal values, policies, and subjects.Footnote 81 Contemporary ‘othering’ is tied to ‘values’, which marks a shift of focus from the ‘immutable origins’ that were the basis of Orientalist ‘othering’ strategies.Footnote 82 Indeed, it is CONTEST's explicit aim to ‘elevate “moderate Muslims” to become the strongest voices in Muslim communities, able to lead a campaign promoting “shared values” and isolating the “extremists”’.Footnote 83 Guidebooks, CONTEST, and Egyptian counterterrorism discourses articulate intertextually to (re)produce post-9/11 ‘war on terror’ discourses that assume that ‘a good Muslim, paradoxically, is a secular Muslim who is influenced by the West’ and can be ‘assisted into modernity’, while a bad Muslim is ‘anti-modern’ and inherently destructive.Footnote 84 In so doing guidebooks, in articulation with UK and Egyptian counterterrorism discourses, function to construct and make known a religiously defined sector of Egyptian society represented as an inherent threat to Western tourists and their values. Lila Abu-Lughod argues that such classifications have revived ‘a profoundly civilizational discourse’.Footnote 85

It is important to note that guidebooks, CONTEST, and Egyptian counterterrorism discourses do not represent this threat as fixed and easily identifiable. Guidebooks, which make a distinction between ‘good’ and ‘bad’ Muslims in their representations of the two extremes of Egyptian society, at the same time contend that ‘the bulk of the Egyptian populace falls somewhere between these two extremes’.Footnote 86 This means both that ‘most Egyptians’ are horrified by terrorist atrocities,Footnote 87 but also that ‘the Islamists’ view of world events is broadly shared at every level of society, from janitors to generals’.Footnote 88 Guidebooks thereby represent all Egyptian subjects and spaces as posing a risk to Western tourists in the presence of a potentially threatening sector of society. Reflecting guidebook discourses, CONTEST describes how radicalised states and citizens are a minority, but that the Muslim community as a whole is ‘vulnerable’, requiring suspicion and surveillance.Footnote 89 Anyone could be a terrorist, especially with the increased prominence of so-called ‘self-starting’ groups as al-Qaeda fragments in the context of increased international pressure.Footnote 90 Egyptian counterterrorism discourses similarly identify risk with the general population and urban spaces, suggesting a threat from anyone but a small minority of elites. These discourses replace a discourse of ‘enemies’ with one of threatening spaces and subjects, which is more powerful in its versatility and ability to exclude a whole people. Guidebooks, CONTEST, and Egyptian counterterrorism discourses thereby produce a threat that, although specifically defined, is generalised and difficult to pinpoint. In so doing they constitute all Egyptians and Muslims as potentially threatening subjects.

Producing protection 1: states of exception

Having defined risk in this way, guidebooks proceed with their first strategy to attract Western tourists. The way that guidebooks construct and make known this risk allows them to encourage and defend risk-mitigation strategies that require strong safety and security measures. Guidebooks do so by emphasising how tourists are protected from ‘bad’ Muslims through the extensive security measures taken by the Egyptian government.Footnote 91 These measures are paradoxically laws that suspend the rule of law for ‘bad’ Muslims in the interests of security. They can be understood as (re)producing states of exception, camps of ‘rightless’ people that are located outside of the political community and whose lives do not matter.Footnote 92 However, as Aihwa Ong points out, the ‘exception’ can be ‘deployed to include as well as to exclude’. Articulations between these forms of exception have meant that they are not mutually exclusive but that ‘different degrees of protection can be negotiated for the politically excluded’ based on the multiple possible ways that subjects are evaluated and valued in different contexts.Footnote 93 Guidebooks’ first strategy to attract Western tourists is to use the representation of ‘bad’ Muslims as an essential, irrational, and violent threat to tourists – and indeed to the values of Western liberal democracy as a whole – to justify Egyptian government measures that locate these ‘bad’ Muslims in a variety of states of exception.

Here, guidebook representations articulate with Egyptian counterterrorism discourses, (re)produced through broader government discourses, which have used the threat posed by ‘bad’ Muslims to Western tourists and ancient relics to justify the political and economic exclusion of the demographic masses from tourist sites. Scholars have documented how state and local governments have violently evicted Egyptians working and living in historical sites such as the Pyramids, the tombs in Luxor, and Islamic Cairo, depicting these locals as uncivilised, lawless slum-dwellers and tomb-raiders, while monuments like the Pyramids have been closed on Egyptian holidays to limit visits from the general population.Footnote 94 The Egyptian government has justified these practices as a means of protecting tourists and relics. Guidebooks outline the exclusion of locals from tourist sitesFootnote 95 but fail to implicate tourism and tourists in their indirect support for such Egyptian state policies. Instead they use this information as a means of positioning their tourists as responsible and worldly travellers, superior and detached in their knowledge of the ‘real’ effects of mass tourism and repressive governments.Footnote 96 By valuing the human rights of travellers over those of hosts and foreclosing critical reflection on tourist privileges and prejudices, guidebooks maintain what Lisle calls ‘an ethics without a politics’.Footnote 97 The intertextual articulation of guidebook representations and Egyptian counterterrorism discourses, which similarly position Western tourists and Egyptian elites as ‘at risk’ from ‘bad’ Muslims, functions thereby to privilege the rights of Western tourists, while those of many Egyptian citizens are suspended.

Insofar as guidebooks employ a logic parallel to Egyptian counterterrorism discourses and CONTEST to represent the threat to Western tourists, they also produce an acceptance of the broader counterterrorism measures taken against ‘bad’ Muslims by both the Egyptian and UK governments as part of the ‘war on terror’. The most recent Egyptian government used threats from terrorism and destabilisation on the part of ‘bad’ Muslims to justify its state of emergency. A 2009 report from the United Nations Special Rapporteur on the Promotion and Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms while Countering Terrorism (SR) found that, in practice, the Egyptian emergency law gave State Security Investigations (SSI), located outside of the regular legislative channels, ‘carte blanche’ powers to arrest and detain individuals deemed ‘dangerous to public security and order’. These individuals could be held without charge or trial for years, sometimes in undisclosed detention centres where they were ‘incommunicado’ and likely subject to torture.Footnote 98 To the extent that Egyptian counterterrorism discourses brand the demographic masses as essentially ‘bad’ Muslims and maintain a broad definition of terrorism, counterterrorism measures can be used to indefinitely suspend the rights of the majority of the population. Indeed, the SR argues that Egypt's definition of terrorism ‘may unjustifiably restrict the enjoyment of human rights pertaining to the exercise of peaceful activities, including dissent and political opposition’.Footnote 99 The report points out that the most recent Egyptian government often used Emergency Supreme State Security Courts – which the SR argues do not offer a fair trial – to try suspects in cases where charges have no clear connection to terrorist acts.Footnote 100 In 2007, changes were made to article 179 of the Egyptian Constitution as part of the transition to replace the emergency law with a counterterrorism law. The SR has found that these changes continue to allow for suspects to be arrested, interrogated, and monitored without judicial oversight, becoming ‘a permanent state of emergency, although under a new name’.Footnote 101 The SR has expressed strong concerns that the state of emergency has ‘become the norm’,Footnote 102 producing a ‘culture of exceptionality’.Footnote 103 Indeed the ruling SCAF has not only extended the state of emergency, including the use of ‘emergency state security courts’, but has expanded its mandate, citing threats from, among other things, labour strikes, false rumours, thuggery, and traffic disruptions (alluding to those caused by recent demonstrations).Footnote 104 By constructing a risk to the lives and Western liberal democratic values of the Egyptian government and economic elites, Egyptian counterterrorism discourses have produced and justified the suspension of rights for those subjects and spaces represented as inherently threatening. In so doing, Egyptian counterterrorism discourses articulate intertextually with guidebooks’ representations of a bifurcated Egyptian society to further justify the protection of ‘good’ Muslims. Guidebooks' positive depiction of ‘good’ Muslims as pro-Western and economically successful reveals the political and economic, rather than purely territorial, logic that values and protects certain citizens and excludes others.Footnote 105

Similarly, CONTEST specifically outlines changes to British laws that jeopardise individual rights in order to counter the threat from international terrorism. These include, for instance, ‘control orders’ – introduced in 2005 – that place specific obligations on individuals in order to ‘prevent, restrict or disrupt’ their alleged terrorist involvement.Footnote 106 These obligations mainly include restrictions on movement or communication. Control orders can be imposed in a closed court for security reasons, and can last indefinitely.Footnote 107 In recent cases, control orders have been ruled as ‘unlawful’ by High Court rulings.Footnote 108 CONTEST itself acknowledges that control orders have been challenged successfully for depriving liberty under Article 5 of the European Court of Human Rights.Footnote 109 CONTEST maintains, however, that they are key to maintaining security,Footnote 110 arguing that their prosecution measures ‘reflect a proper balance between the security of all and the liberty and privacy of the individual’.Footnote 111 The document therefore contends that these laws are justifiable within – and indeed uphold – the principles and values of liberal democracy as a response to those threatening them.Footnote 112 However, to the extent that CONTEST has constructed this threat as explicitly arising from a form of Islam, and underscores the potential for all Muslims to become radicalised, it is the rights of this specific group that are targeted for suspension. Indeed, Arun Kundnani warns that, within counterterrorism discourses, mainstream UK Muslims are no longer seen as ‘citizens to whom the state is accountable but potential recruits to a global counter-insurgency’.Footnote 113 Insofar as CONTEST constructs groups and spaces that pose an inherent threat to Western liberal democracy and its subjects, it constitutes and simultaneously justifies a limit to liberalism's universal applicationFootnote 114 and identifies those subjects and spaces to which it does not apply.

The intertextually constructed religiously based threat to Western liberal democratic values and subjects functions thereby to justify the (re)production of states of exception that specifically target ‘bad’ Muslims. This justification manages to resolve the aforementioned contradictions between representations of Egyptian government practices found in guidebooks and CONTEST, and those produced by the Egyptian government itself. Guidebooks and CONTEST pinpoint the Egyptian government's failures to universally apply Western liberal democratic values as a source of terrorist grievances. However, Egyptian counterterrorism discourses explain their failure to universally apply these values in a way that articulates with guidebook and CONTEST justifications: all three discourses represent states of exception for ‘bad’ Muslims as a means to protect subjects and spaces that uphold Western liberal democratic values. The exception to Western liberal democratic values is paradoxically revealed as a principle internal to it.

Sherene Razack argues that, with the so-called war on terror, ‘the camp has become the rule … inspired by a sense of permanent emergency and endless war’.Footnote 115 The particular way that guidebooks represent and make ‘risk’ known, which fails to implicate Western liberal subjects and spaces, justifies the exclusion of inherently threatening spaces and subjects. To the extent that they construct a population in essential opposition to Western liberal democracy, guidebooks can be seen as contributing to the justification for the ‘war on terror’. At the same time this first guidebook strategy articulates with UK and Egyptian counterterrorism discourses to constitute Egyptian spaces and subjects as non-threatening and appealing to tourists.

Producing protection II: exceptional states

Having justified locating ‘bad’ Muslims in states of exception, guidebooks proceed with their second strategy to attract tourists. Insofar as they imply that tourists with Western liberal democratic values are inherently progressive, guidebooks can locate Western tourists in ‘exceptional states’. Exceptional states focus attention away from threats to tourists. Instead they (re)produce and privilege the ‘safe’ spaces and subject positions of a colonial ‘golden age’, which are no less essentialised than figures and spaces of risk. Exceptional states cater to colonial nostalgia for this ‘golden age’ located within a universal narrative of development according to Western liberal criteria, which functions also to protect those spaces and subjects that ‘fit’ somewhere along this timeline. These spaces and subject positions parallel and articulate intertextually with those privileged in UK and Egyptian counterterrotism discourses. Exceptional states effectively protect and privilege the human, economic, and political rights of Western tourists, British citizens, and ‘good’ Muslims who maintain Western liberal democratic values. In so doing, exceptional states work together with states of exception to (re)produce and reinforce a particular world order.

Guidebooks spatially locate tourists in the Pharaonic past of tombs and temples, thereby representing a temporally defined ‘tourist’ space. In passages and photographs that describe and recommend day-to-day tourist activities and interactions, guidebooks invite tourists to step back in time,Footnote 116 and prioritise ancient sites in their itineraries.Footnote 117 If people are included in photographs of these sites they are generally Egyptians in traditional dress. The location of tourists in ancient sites, is a familiar and comfortable image for British tourists. Egypt's past and it monuments have been appropriated and constructed, since colonial times, as representing the origins of Western civilisation, incorporating Egypt's heritage into a linear narrative of Western history whose endpoint is modern Western liberal democracy.Footnote 118 Through this narrative Egypt is positioned as behind in a progressive ‘queue’ judged according to Western development standards.Footnote 119 Representations of tourist sites efface references to the more recent historical context of these spaces and avoid their association with images of contemporary Islam, urban poverty, or modern Egyptian subjects that represent a threat to tourists. Such associations might disrupt the universal evolutionary queue as they elude classification according to its logic; they are not exclusively representative of ‘underdeveloped’ spaces nor do they reflect the utopian image of Western liberal democracy.Footnote 120 By avoiding these images and relocating Egypt ‘even further back in time’ in the ancient past, guidebooks restore the queue and construct ‘tourist’ spaces as safe from threats.Footnote 121 Tourist spaces are ‘exceptional’ in that they essentialise a Western development model and privilege those spaces and subjects that ‘fit’ within its narrative.

The location of Western tourists in ‘exceptional states’ simultaneously produces privileged and essentialised tourist subject positions. By prioritising ancient Egypt, guidebooks invite tourists to take on the role of colonial explorers, arguing that ‘Egypt brings out the explorer in all of us’.Footnote 122 Tourists are thereby encouraged to (re)incorporate Egypt into rational Western history,Footnote 123 without a mention of the West's physical and discursive appropriation of Egypt's past in which they are effectively participating. At the same time, guidebooks locate their tourists among a community of like-minded travellers who independently know, observe, and judge the ‘real’ Egypt from separate and superior positions, explicitly differentiating them from mass tourists.Footnote 124 Guidebooks exclude tourists from photographs, locating them as detached observers of the aforementioned reified ancient scenes and objects. In its quest to offer travellers an authentic experience, the LP presents tourists with clothing and body-language tips to ‘blend in’ as a ‘resident expat, thus deflecting attention onto the more obvious tourists walking behind [them] – and giving [them] more opportunity to enjoy the good things about Cairo’.Footnote 125 Tourists’ absence from photographs and ability to ‘blend in’ are tropes functioning to position Western tourists as observers of the ‘real’ Egypt who are themselves not observed.Footnote 126 Guidebooks thereby maintain continuities with nineteenth-century photographic representations that portrayed the ‘real’ Egypt, cut off from its observer, as well as with British colonial tourists to Egypt who similarly disguised themselves to maintain an ‘invisible gaze’.Footnote 127 With reference to these colonial practices, Mitchell argues that ‘to see without being seen confirmed one's separation from the world, and corresponded at the same time to a position of power’.Footnote 128 Guidebook tourists are thereby scripted to enact a modern colonial gaze that keeps a sovereign distance in order to gain visual command over spaces. At the same time, both guidebooks position tourists as superior by constantly ridiculing Egypt through cynicism and humour in their texts. In guidebook discussions of the Egyptian transport system, for instance, the LP explains that scenes inside public buses usually resemble ‘a Guiness World Record attempt on the greatest number of people in a fixed space’Footnote 129 and the RG exclaims that the new yellow cabs ‘amazingly, actually use a meter’.Footnote 130 Such statements reinforce Egypt's inferior position in relation to tourists according to the aforementioned ‘queue’. Guidebooks thereby (re)produce tourists as modern autonomous individuals in relation to the simultaneously produced ‘object’ of their gaze.Footnote 131

More specifically, guidebooks explicitly position tourists as descendants of British colonial travellers of the eighteenth and nineteenth century. They do so by suggesting books from this period as pre-departure reading.Footnote 132 Several scholars, including Derek Gregory, Timothy Mitchell and Edward W. Said, argue that such texts, and corresponding colonial-era practices like photography and tourism, produced Egypt as a transparent and legible space, laying the groundwork for imperialism.Footnote 133 To do so they draw on Said's theory of ‘Orientalism’, a cultural enterprise and system of knowledge about the ‘Orient’ institutionalised in the late eighteenth century by British and French empires and appropriated by the American empire since World War II. Orientalism functions to constitute and define the West as superior in relation to the Orient in a way that has (re)produced the West's colonial practices.Footnote 134 Said explains that within Orientalist discourses ‘on the one hand there are Westerners, and on the other there are Arab-Orientals; the former are (in no particular order) rational, peaceful, liberal, logical, capable of holding real values, without natural suspicion; the latter are none of these things’.Footnote 135 Nonetheless, the LP and RG go on to recommend activities, such as travelling on the Nile in dahabiyyas (two-masted wooden sailboats) and steamboats, that re-enact eighteenth and nineteenth-century British travelling practices as part of ‘nostalgia’ for the ‘colonial tradition’.Footnote 136 Guidebooks equate these colonially inspired travellers with a kind of worldliness and heritage but at the same time fail to contextualise or critically reflect on the role of British colonialism in Egypt. The RG is more critical than the LP, which at points explicitly legitimises and praises the British occupation,Footnote 137 but neither guidebook is self-reflexive about the Orientalist assumptions behind their depictions of ‘bad’ Muslims,Footnote 138 or indeed behind the travelling practices of contemporary Western tourists in Egypt. Guidebooks also fail to outline the part tourism and tourists played in imperialism. F. Robert Hunter outlines specific links between tourism and the West's conquest of the Middle East, focusing on the reciprocal relationship between imperialism and Thomas Cook and Sons’ development of tourism in Egypt from 1869 to 1914.Footnote 139 He argues that the British Empire was vital to tourism development as it offered protection, supportive local governments, and new regions for development. At the same time, tourism was vital to the British empire as Thomas Cook and Son's company not only directly aided imperial ventures by conveying an expeditionary force to Sudan to rescue General Gordon in 1884, but helped Britain maintain its empire by deepening Egypt's economic dependence, developing good ties with locals, spreading support for empire through British tourists, and maintaining a British presence in Upper Egypt. By obfuscating the relationship between tourism and empire, tourists’ positioning by guidebooks is part of the process of nostalgia for ‘innocent and uncorrupted’ spaces of a (fictional) ‘golden age’ with its clearly defined subject positions and power relations.Footnote 140 By locating tourists as detached explorers observing ancient Egypt, guidebooks position them firmly at the head of the aforementioned ‘queue’, precluding any threats from, or complicity in, Egypt's present.Footnote 141 These colonial subject positions are located and protected in ‘exceptional states’, as they perform roles that fit into a reified linear narrative of Western development. A retreat into these states functions to relieve present anxieties around figures and spaces of risk by locating Egypt as part of a familiar discourse of Western origins or control. Indeed, Gregory argues that ‘while they may be displaced, distorted, and (most often) denied, the capacities that inhere within the colonial past are routinely reaffirmed and reactivated in the colonial present’.Footnote 142

A retreat to colonial subjectivities in guidebooks articulates with Britain's move, reflected in CONTEST, to prioritise loyalty to ‘Britishness’ above all else. Indeed, Simon Gikandi argues that English identity – and its ‘master narratives’, including liberal universalism and modernity – was shaped through and understood in relation to colonial subjects and spaces.Footnote 143 According to Gikandi, there is currently a ‘crisis of Englishness’, which he attributes to the fact that its identities and narratives lost their validity outside of imperialism, forcing ‘the imagined community to be unravelled’.Footnote 144 Gikandi argues that this crisis is reinforced by ‘the large migration of formerly colonized subjects into the metropolitan centre’,Footnote 145 which has brought into question the spatio-temporal differentiations that helped define ‘Englishness’. CONTEST addresses similar concerns related to ‘Britishness’, which unlike ‘Englishness’ does not differentiate between or define itself in opposition to countries within the United Kingdom. The UK's solution, reflected in CONTEST, is to shift from policies of tolerance and multiculturalism, which have been seen as allowing inherent (Muslim) threats to develop,Footnote 146 towards a civic integration approach, which involves respecting the ‘principles and values of the UK’ and retaining differences in the private realm.Footnote 147 Guidebooks’ second tactic, which produces and privileges colonial subject positions in exceptional states, therefore articulates with CONTEST in a way that reinforces Britishness and assuages post-colonial anxieties and fears brought on by globalisation. This second tactic supports the first, which identifies and locates ‘bad’ Muslims in states of exception, reflecting how the current retreat into a ‘universal’ liberal British identity requires, (re)produces, and (re)excludes the ‘other’ for its definition.Footnote 148 Indeed, according to Gikandi, travel and ‘self-realization in the spaces of the other’, continues to be a vital means by which ‘Europe and its others are re-created’.Footnote 149 The guidebooks’ production of safe exceptional states for tourists thereby articulates with the production of a safe UK, scripting the roles and interactions of its subjects.

Guidebooks’ location of tourists in the ancient past articulates also with government and tourism industry discourses that have contributed to the production of exceptional states. Like guidebooks, the Egyptian government's counterterrorism discourses as well as nationalist and tourism industry strategies allow Pharaonic Egypt to stand in for Egypt's ‘modern’ identity, distancing themselves from Islamic identities.Footnote 150 To ‘protect’ tourists and Egyptian heritage, Egypt is increasingly restoring its sites in a way that creates safe and sanitised outdoor museums that prioritise the distant past and the appeal of its heritage.Footnote 151 This representation of Egypt that prioritises its ancient past, and its associated restoration projects, is supported by international organisations like the European Union, UNESCO and UNDP, who see these sites as part of Western history, and indeed the history of humankind.Footnote 152 To represent the ‘real’ Egypt and protect tourists, these international actors, along with the Egyptian state and tourism industry, support projects of spatial (re)organisation that physically and discursively efface the more recent historical contexts of these sites and their relationship with people as spaces of residence and employment, reifying and privileging their (narrowly-defined) ‘artifacts’.Footnote 153 The absence of the Egyptian general population from tourist sites, based on its aforementioned threat to tourists and monuments, reinforces a depiction of the ‘real’ Egypt as firmly located in the ancient past. At the same time, this image of Egypt articulates with guidebooks to physically produce exceptional states in a way that privileges the rights of Western tourists.

The image of Egypt produced through this articulation functions also to protect and privilege the political and economic rights of Egyptians adhering to Western liberal democratic principles. It does so firstly by contributing to the (re)production of Egypt's Pharaonic nationalism, which associates Egypt with its ‘glorious’ ancient past.Footnote 154 Political parties prior to Egypt's 1952 revolution adopted Pharaonic nationalism as a tactic in the struggle against British colonialism.Footnote 155 It was also a key source of inspiration for Gamal Abdel Nasser, Egyptian president from 1956 to 1970, who embraced secular rule.Footnote 156 In the 1970s, President Anwar Sadat solidified the newest manifestation of Pharaonic Nationalism, which involved Egypt's move towards liberalisation and alignment with Western foreign policy,Footnote 157 naming himself ‘the last of the Pharaohs’. Although he initially embraced both Egypt's Pharaonic and Islamic identities,Footnote 158 towards the end of his tenure Sadat positioned himself and his regime in opposition to Egyptians espousing more ‘extreme’ religiously defined identities, justifying policies that violently repressed Islamists.Footnote 159 Indeed, Islamists who assassinated Sadat defined their actions with reference to this opposition when they shouted ‘We have killed the Pharaoh!’Footnote 160 The dichotomous positioning of the Pharaonic state and Islam at that moment corresponds with the construction of the ‘real’ Egypt by tourism industry and government discourses. This narrowly defined and elitist Egyptian identity justified the political and economic exclusionsFootnote 161 that Islamists were resisting and continues to do so through the state of emergency that was imposed after Sadat's death. The Pharaonic image of Egypt came to coalesce around and reinforce the political agenda of Mubarak's pro-Western, pro-liberalisation regime that distanced itself from a ‘bad’ Muslim identity. Guidebook representations that prioritise Egypt's ancient sites and their depiction of the most recent government as ‘good’ Muslims function together to produce exceptional states that essentially privilege an Egyptian regime that maintains liberal democratic values.

Secondly, the production of ‘safe’ and appealing tourist spaces has advanced the short-term financial interests of Egyptian economic elites who largely benefit from tourism, often at the expense of the monuments themselves. In Luxor, for instance, restoration projects prioritise the expedient production of safe, exclusionary, and visually attractive ‘tourist’ spaces. In so doing they sacrifice conservation in terms of historical accuracy and proper materials, disregarding the damage that the increased presence of tourists is likely to cause to the monuments.Footnote 162 These choices reveal a contradictory articulation between the elite Egyptian discourses of nationalism and liberalism, underscoring the contemporary liberal rationality underlying Pharaonic nationalism. The contemporary iteration of liberalism – often referred to as neoliberalism – goes further than classical liberalism, which opposes government interference in the natural laws of the market,Footnote 163 and ‘adopts the self-regulating free market as the model for proper government’.Footnote 164 This mode of governance specifically prioritises economic logics and values defined by market-driven truths,Footnote 165 privileging ‘market-driven calculations’ and ‘self-governing subjects as preferred citizens’.Footnote 166 Indeed, the ‘restoration’ of Egypt's ancient monuments ultimately privileges Western tourists, multinational corporations, and elites that own hotels, along with tour guides who require a university degree to be licensed.Footnote 167

Overall, the production of these exceptional states reveals the liberal logics behind the inclusion and protection of the rights of Western tourists, as a means of increasing the flow of resources to ‘good’ Muslims, while less marketable and profitable ‘bad’ Muslims are excluded from tourist sites. Exclusions and inclusions are therefore key to a logic of exception based on protecting politically and economically valued subjects rather than – and often at the expense of – territorially defined citizens.Footnote 168 Ong explains that, within contemporary liberalism as a technology of governing, the logic of exception not only excludes certain subjects from politics and the benefits of capitalist development,Footnote 169 as in the case of those ‘bad’ Muslims violently evicted from their spaces of work and residence, but becomes a practice of governance that creates ‘new economic possibilities, spaces and techniques for governing a population’.Footnote 170 States of exception are therefore not entirely based on the suspension of political rights but are strategies that function with exceptional states to ‘differently regulate populations for optimal productivity’ through spatial practices.Footnote 171

The logics behind the production of exceptional states that protect tourists are also shared by new state-subsidised urban development projects that protect ‘good’ Muslims ‘at risk’ from the general population. Egyptian real estate developers are currently constructing gated communities for elites on the desert outskirts of Cairo.Footnote 172 Developers promote satellite cities as a form of protection for elites at risk from the spaces and subjects of urban areas. Like guidebooks, they architecturally market nostalgia for the late nineteenth and early twentieth-century colonial era of Egypt – without any reference to the British occupation – as a solution to the instabilities of the present. Paralleling the positioning of the tourist as colonial explorer in tourist spaces, Egyptian elites are positioned as part of a detached and superior elite national patrimony pioneering in the desert,Footnote 173 which caters to a similar nostalgia.

The construction of elite satellite communities is supported by and caters to a liberal tenet that development should be left to the private sector. Real estate developers involved in building these highly profitable sites are supported by the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund through structural adjustment programmes as well as indirectly by the most recent government, which has offered them credit from public banks and holds down land prices.Footnote 174 In this way these exceptional states maintain the market rationality of ‘tourist’ spaces that prioritise ‘market-driven calculations’ and Western liberal democratic subjects. At the same time, paradoxically, they have been highly subsidised and promoted by the state and international financial institutions, reinforcing the mutually beneficial rather than antagonist relationship between state and business elites’ discourses in the Egyptian context. Indeed, the seclusion of elites in their own private participatory democracy, where residents manage infrastructure and services through a common fund,Footnote 175 goes hand in hand with the aforementioned discourse of risk and states of exception, which limit dissent to this contemporary liberal moral order and the political system that supports it. The construction of risk thereby ‘legitimizes political de-liberalization (including repression, torture, election-rigging) while promoting a particular landscape of perverse economic liberalization (producing gates, walls, mass arrests, and surveillance systems rather than any social or labour equivalent of a free market)’.Footnote 176 In these spaces as in tourism sites, the logic of exception functions as a market-driven technique that produces spatially defined economic possibilities and techniques to manage populations.Footnote 177 Such exceptional spaces thereby protect the economic, political, and human rights of elites (or ‘good’ Muslims) who reside in and construct these satellite cities, functioning to privilege Western liberal democratic subjects and development models. The flipside of the state of exception, where ‘bad’ Muslims are denied rights within a political community, are exceptional states that privilege the rights of those positioned at the other extreme of society.

Conclusion

Guidebook representations of Egyptian spaces and subjects construct Egypt as an attractive tourist destination by producing and managing risk in a way that accounts for terrorist threats and constructs these threats as manageable. They thereby negotiate the meta-narratives of Egypt that characterise it as a ‘bomb’ or ‘tomb,’ as an explosive device associated with pollution, terrorism, riots, and protests, or as ‘dead or ruthlessly repressed’ with its ‘romantic myths of tombs and harems’ that lure tourists.Footnote 178 More than this, guidebooks articulate intertextually with UK and Egyptian counterterrorism discourses in ways that similarly protect and privilege Western liberal democracy through states of exception and exceptional states. These exceptional states work with states of exception in such a way that they are mutually constitutive, underscoring the logic of exception that (re)produces the current Western liberal order. Risk thereby functions as ‘a social and political construct that crystallizes, sorts, and normalizes dangers, fears, and anxieties that define and limit a given society’, producing stigmatised subordinate groups, scapegoats, and illegitimate territories.Footnote 179

By examining the articulations of guidebooks, CONTEST, and Egyptian government and economic elite discourses, I have shown how tourism discourses function to (re)produce and reinforce counterterrorism discourses. Highlighting the constitutive role of tourism in international politics helps us better understand the complex and mundane means through which Western liberal democracy is protected. Such a reading of international politics disrupts the dichotomy between high and low politics that privileges the former, by analysing how representations derived from tourism texts and domestic counterterrorism policies – that respond to a nationally and internationally defined threat – articulate in ways that redirect and reinforce discourses at the local, domestic, and international levels. It is not therefore a question of whether high or low politics are more important or powerful in international politics, but of looking at how particular representations articulate transnationally in very specific times and spaces.

References

1 This article was written before the 25 January 2011 revolution. Unless otherwise indicated, all references to Egypt, the Egyptian government, and its policies/discourses relate to Egypt's pre-revolution period under Hosni Mubarak. It is difficult to comment on the impact of the revolution in this article as Egypt is currently in a process of transition.

2 The United Kingdom's 2009 counterterrorism strategy, Pursue Prevent Protect Prepare, also known as CONTEST, explicitly asserts that the sources of inspiration and planning for international terrorism are ‘overseas’, and positions Egypt as a primary source of origin and threat of terrorism. See Home Office, Pursue Prevent Protect Prepare: The United Kingdom's Strategy for Countering International Terrorism (2009), available at: {http://security.homeoffice.gov.uk/counter-terrorism-strategy/} accessed 31 January 2010, pp. 85, 141. CONTEST identifies ‘international terrorism’ as the current source of threats to the UK and its interests overseas in. International terrorism includes those groups or individuals directly and indirectly connected with al-Qaeda and its ideology, located in ‘the Near East (Palestine, Israel, Lebanon); Iraq; South Asia (Afghanistan, Pakistan, India); North Africa (the Maghreb, Libya and Egypt) and the Horn of Africa; and South East Asia (primarily Indonesia)’ (pp. 33–4). In its outline of the historical development of international terrorism CONTEST identifies the origins of the current international terrorist threat in Islamist militant ideologies that arose in Egypt in the late 1970s and early 80s, spreading to Afghanistan and Algeria. In 1998, al-Qaeda and the old Egyptian Islamic Jihad merged to form the ‘World Islamic Front’, which called for attacks on the citizens of the US and its allies around the world (pp. 24–5). Meanwhile, terrorism propagandists from Algeria and Egypt had moved to the UK, and British-based extremist organisations started supporting participation in overseas terrorism, while al-Qaeda began recruiting British nationals and setting up a UK network (pp. 28–9). The 2009 document was replaced in July 2011, after this article was written and revised for publication. See Home Office, CONTEST: The United Kingdom's Strategy for Countering Terrorism (2011), available at: {http://www.homeoffice.gov.uk/publications/counter-terrorism/counter-terrorism-strategy} accessed 6 October 2011.

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18 Firestone et al., Lonely Planet Egypt, p. 507; Richardson and Jacobs, Rough Guide to Egypt, p. 74.

19 Bhattacharyya, Deborah P., ‘Mediating India: An Analysis of a Guidebook’, Annals of Tourism Research, 24:2 (1997), pp. 371–89CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

20 Lisle, ‘Humanitarian Travels’, p. 161.

21 The 2009 document was replaced in July 2011, after this article was written and revised for publication, but is subject to similar critiques. See Home Office, CONTEST: The United Kingdom's Strategy for Countering Terrorism (2011), available at: {http://www.homeoffice.gov.uk/publications/counter-terrorism/counter-terrorism-strategy} accessed 6 October 2011. For a summary of the changes and initial critiques see ‘Updated anti-extremism strategy published’, BBC News (8 June 2011), available at: {http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-13679360} accessed 6 October 2011.

22 These include Vitalis, Robert, ‘Middle East on the Edge of the Pleasure Periphery’, Middle East Report, 196 (1995), pp. 27CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Mitchell, Timothy, ‘Making the Nation: The Politics of Heritage in Egypt’, in AlSayyad, Nezar (ed.), Consuming Tradition, Manufacturing Heritage: Global Norms and Urban Forms in the Age of Tourism (London: Routledge, 2001), pp. 212–39Google Scholar; Denis, Eric, ‘Cairo as Neo-Liberal Capital? From Walled City to Gated Communities’, in Singerman, Diane and Amar, Paul (eds), Cairo Cosmopolitan: Politics, Culture and Urban Space in the New Middle East (Cairo: The American University in Cairo Press, 2006), pp. 4771Google Scholar; Elsheshtawy, Yasser, ‘Urban Transformations: Social Control at al-Rifa'i Mosque and Sultan Hasan Square’, in Singerman, Diane and Amar, Paul (eds), Cairo Cosmopolitan: Politics, Culture and Urban Space in the New Middle East (Cairo: The American University in Cairo Press, 2006), pp. 295312Google Scholar; Kuppinger, Petra, ‘Pyramids and Alleys: Global Dynamics and Local Strategies in Giza’, in Singerman, Diane and Amar, Paul (eds), Cairo Cosmopolitan: Politics, Culture and Urban Space in the New Middle East (Cairo: The American University in Cairo Press, 2006), pp. 313–44Google Scholar; Singerman, Diane and Amar, Paul, ‘Introduction: Contesting Myths, Critiquing Cosmopolitanism, and Creating the New Cairo School of Urban Studies’, in Singerman, Diane and Amar, Paul (eds), Cairo Cosmopolitan: Politics, Culture and Urban Space in the New Middle East (Cairo: The American University in Cairo Press, 2006), pp. 146Google Scholar; Williams, Caroline, ‘Reconstructing Islamic Cairo: Forces at Work’, in Singerman, Diane and Amar, Paul (eds), Cairo Cosmopolitan: Politics, Culture and Urban Space in the New Middle East (Cairo: The American University in Cairo Press, 2006), pp. 269–94Google Scholar; Wynn, L. L., Pyramids and Nightclubs: A Travel Ethnography of Arab and Western Imaginations of Egypt, from King Tut and a Colony of Atlantis to Rumors of Sex Orgies, Urban Legends about a Marauding Prince, and Blonde Belly Dancers (Austin: University of Texas Press, 2007)Google Scholar.

23 United Nations Human Rights Council, Report of the Special Rapporteur on the Promotion and Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms while Countering Terrorism, Mission to Egypt (2009) available at: {http://www2.ohchr.org/english/issues/terrorism/rapporteur/reports.htm} accessed 31 January 2010.

24 Rose, Visual Methodologies, p. 136.

25 Ibid., pp. 150–8.

26 Richardson and Jacobs, Rough Guide to Egypt, p. 83.

27 Firestone et al., Lonely Planet Egypt, pp. 63–4, 16.

28 These two extremes are also differentiated based on the status of women in each (Firestone et al., Lonely Planet Egypt, pp. 63–4, 16). In the interests of space, however, I have chosen to focus on how guidebooks differentiate between the extremes of Egyptian society based on religiosity, class, and level of support for the West.

29 Firestone et al., Lonely Planet Egypt, pp. 63–8; Richardson and Jacobs, Rough Guide to Egypt, pp. 6, 785–7.

30 Firestone et al., Lonely Planet Egypt, p. 66; Richardson and Jacobs, Rough Guide to Egypt, pp. 6, 785.

31 Firestone et al., Lonely Planet Egypt, p. 63.

32 Richardson and Jacobs, Rough Guide to Egypt, p. 6.

33 Firestone et al., Lonely Planet Egypt, p. 63.

34 Ibid., p. 66.

35 Ibid., p. 63.

36 Ibid.

37 Richardson and Jacobs, Rough Guide to Egypt, pp. 787–8.

38 Biswas, Shampa, ‘The “New Cold War”: Secularism, Orientalism and Postcoloniality’, in Chowdhry, Geeta and Nair, Sheila (eds), Power, Postcolonialism and International Relations: Reading Race, Gender and Class (New York: Routledge, 2004), pp. 187–8Google Scholar. Modernisation theory, which developed after World War II, portrays Western liberal democracy as a universal final stage in the transition from ‘pre-modern/traditional’ to ‘modern’ societies according to a teleological model of development. Other countries are read, evaluated, and managed according to this ‘stages of growth model’. See Crush, Jonathan, Power of Development (London; New York: Routledge, 1995), pp. 910Google Scholar.

39 Richardson and Jacobs, Rough Guide to Egypt, pp. 57–8; Firestone et al., Lonely Planet Egypt, pp. 44–5.

40 Firestone et al., Lonely Planet Egypt, p. 45; Richardson and Jacobs, Rough Guide to Egypt, pp. 57–8, 783.

41 Richardson and Jacobs, Rough Guide to Egypt, pp. 57–8.

42 Ibid., pp. 134, 783, 789; Firestone et al., Lonely Planet Egypt, pp. 44–5.

43 Firestone et al., Lonely Planet Egypt, p. 44.

44 Ibid., p. 64.

45 Ibid., pp. 64, 44–5.

46 Richardson and Jacobs, Rough Guide to Egypt, p. 781; Firestone et al., Lonely Planet Egypt, p. 16.

47 For more details see Wynn, Pyramids and Nightclubs, pp. 58, 64; Hunter, F. Robert, ‘Tourism and Empire: The Thomas Cook and Son Enterprise on the Nile, 1868–1914’, Middle Eastern Studies, 40:5 (2004), pp. 2854CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

48 For more detail on such liberalisation policies see Steger, Manfred B. and Roy, Ravi K., Neoliberalism: A Very Short Introduction (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2010), pp. 1920CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

49 See Richter, Thomas and Steiner, Christian, ‘Politics, Economics and Tourism Development in Egypt: Insights into the Sectoral Transformation of a Neo-Patrimonial Rentier State’, Third World Quarterly, 29:5 (2008), pp. 939–59CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Gray, Matthew, ‘Economic Reform, Privatization and Tourism in Egypt’, Middle Eastern Studies, 34:2 (1998), pp. 91112CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

50 Indeed, although Egypt has been referred to as the International Monetary Fund's ‘model pupil’ (‘The IMF's Model Pupil’, Economist, 350:8111 [1999] pp. 4–7), enjoying foreign direct investment of 13 billion in 2008 and growth rates of around 7 per cent, this ‘success’ has only benefitted the top 10 per cent of society and absolute poverty has grown from 16.7 per cent to 20 per cent in the last 10 years. Jack Shenker, ‘And Rich Got Richer’, The Guardian (8 November 2009), available at: {http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2009/nov/08/egypt-imf} accessed 11 February 2011. See also Mitchell, Timothy, ‘No Factories, No Problems: The Logic of Neo-Liberalism in Egypt’, Review of African Political Economy, 26:82 (1999), pp. 455–68, 460–1, 463CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

51 Guidebooks outline their contributions to charity projects that are meant to address the environmental and social effects of tourism, largely through development and carbon offsetting schemes, recommending that tourists themselves contribute to these schemes. They also give tips on economically and environmentally sustainable purchasing. The LP and RG encourage tourists to counteract the effects of underdevelopment in Egypt by supplementing people's income through tips or paying extra for taxis. Firestone et al., Lonely Planet, pp. 524, 480, 85, 18, 63; Richardson and Jacobs, Rough Guide to Egypt, pp. 28, 553.

52 Richter and Steiner explain that tourism was specifically encouraged by the IMF to compensate for Egypt's losses from the decline of oil rent revenues in the 1980s. Those benefitting from liberal structural adjustment policies are the small number of financial elites who own major Egyptian tour companies and tourism real estate, as well as Western tour companies and major international hotel chains. See Richter and Steiner, ‘Politics, Politics, Economics and Tourism Development in Egypt’, pp. 939, 951; Vitalis, ‘Middle East on the Edge of the Pleasure Periphery’, p. 7. Regarding the links between tourism and colonialism see p. 22.

53 Home Office, Pursue Prevent Protect Prepare, pp. 33–4.

54 Such international terrorism is explicitly differentiated from ‘Irish-related terrorism’ and ‘domestic extremism’ such as animal rights extremists. Home Office, Pursue Prevent Protect Prepare, p. 59.

55 Ibid., pp. 22, 28–9, 33–4, 36–7, 41–2.

56 Ibid., pp. 28–9, 36, 85, 141.

57 Home Office, Pursue Prevent Protect Prepare, p. 41.

58 As examples of such exclusions, CONTEST cites specifically inequalities in education, health, housing, the labour market, along with a lack of social mobility, underemployment, and feelings of ‘not being accepted or not belonging’ (HO, Pursue Prevent Protect Prepare, pp. 89, 91, 44).

59 Home Office, Pursue Prevent Protect Prepare, p. 44.

60 Biswas, ‘The “New Cold War”’, pp. 186, 190.

61 Home Office, Pursue Prevent Protect Prepare, pp. 41–2, 43–6, 48, 50.

62 Ibid., p. 45.

63 CONTEST promotes supporting vulnerable individuals and states to develop through an increase in social and economic opportunities. The UK Department for International Development programmes, for example, specifically aims to reduce inequality, improve local governance and increase locals’ access to justice and security. See Home Office, Pursue Prevent Protect Prepare, pp. 83, 85, 92, 97. CONTEST also recommends addressing individual grievances such as inequalities in education, health, housing, the labour market, lack of social mobility, and underemployment based on race and faith (2009), pp. 89, 91.

64 Home Office, Pursue Prevent Protect Prepare, p. 157.

65 Ibid., p. 56.

66 CONTEST's threatening spaces and subjects, which articulate with those constructed by guidebooks, thereby similarly position UK subjects as superior responsible individuals, specifically emphasising their ‘Britishness’.

67 UNHRC, Report of the Special Rapporteur on the Promotion and Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms while Countering Terrorism, Mission to Egypt, p. 7; Sarah Carr, ‘UN Expert Issues Damning Report on Egypt's Counterterrorism Measures’, The Daily News Egypt (29 October 2009), available at: {http://www.thedailynewsegypt.com/article.aspx?ArticleID=25502} 18 January 2010.

68 Abu-Lughod, Lila, Local Contexts of Islamism in Popular Media (Amsterdam: Amsterdam University Press, 2006), p. 10CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

69 Abu-Lughod, Local Contexts of Islamism in Popular Media, p. 14.

70 Firestone et al., Lonely Planet Egypt, p. 16.

71 Richardson and Jacobs, Rough Guide to Egypt, p. 789; Firestone et al., Lonely Planet Egypt, p. 45.

72 Timothy Mitchell, ‘Making the Nation’, pp. 222, 228; Denis, ‘Cairo as Neo-Liberal Capital?’; Singerman and Amar, ‘Introduction’, p. 22.

73 Denis, ‘Cairo as Neo-Liberal Capital?’, p. 49.

74 Ibid., pp. 51–2.

75 Ibid., p. 57.

76 Ibid.

77 UNHRC, Report of the Special Rapporteur on the Promotion and Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms while Countering Terrorism, Mission to Egypt, p. 14.

78 UNHRC, Report of the Special Rapporteur on the Promotion and Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms while Countering Terrorism, Mission to Egypt, p. 13; Carr, ‘UN Expert Issues Damning Report on Egypt's Counterterrorism Measures’.

79 Singerman and Amar, ‘Introduction’, p. 9.

80 Richter-Montpetit, Melanie, ‘Empire, Desire and Violence: A Queer Transnational Feminist Reading of the Prisoner “Abuse” in Abu Ghraib and the Question of “Gender Equality”’, International Feminist Journal of Politics, 9:1 (2007), pp. 42, 48CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

81 Arun Kundnani, Spooked: How Not to Prevent Violent Extremism (London: Institute of Race Relations, 2009), available at: {http://www.irr.org.uk/spooked/} 31 January 2010, p. 39.

82 Said, Orientalism, p. 233. For a discussion of orientalism, see pp. 633–634.

83 Kundnani, Spooked, p. 35.

84 Razack, Sherene, Casting Out: The Eviction of Muslims from Western Law and Politics (Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 2008), p. 49Google Scholar.

85 Abu-Lughod, Local Contexts of Islamism in Popular Media, p. 5.

86 Firestone et al., Lonely Planet Egypt, p. 64.

87 Richardson and Jacobs, Rough Guide to Egypt, p. 58.

88 Ibid., p. 789.

89 Home Office, Pursue Prevent Protect Prepare, p. 84.

90 Ibid., pp. 49–50.

91 See Firestone et al., Lonely Planet Egypt, p. 81; Richardson and Jacobs, Rough Guide to Egypt, pp. 57, 58. The LP specifically argues that ‘Egypt is presently no more or less dangerous than any other country, your own included’ (p. 506). The LP is not consistent in this point as earlier it highlights how ‘terrorist attacks are starting to occur with worrying regularity’ (p. 16).

92 Razack, Casting Out, pp. 6–7, 11; Agamben, Giorgio, Homo Sacer: Sovereign Power and Bare Life, trans. Heller-Roazen, Daniel (Stanford, California: Stanford University Press, 1998), pp. 79Google Scholar.

93 Ong, Aihwa, Neoliberalism as Exception: Mutations in Citizenship and Sovereignty (Durham: Duke University Press, 2006), pp. 56, 24CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

94 Mitchell, ‘Making the Nation’, pp. 222, 228; Elsheshtawy, ‘Urban Transformations’; Kuppinger, ‘Pyramids and Alleys’; Singerman and Amar, ‘Introduction’; Williams, ‘Reconstructing Islamic Cairo’; Wynn, Pyramids and Nightclubs; Golia, Maria, City of Sand (Cairo: The American University in Cairo Press, 2004), p. 126Google Scholar.

95 Firestone et al., Lonely Planet Egypt, pp. 106, 126, 140, 147; Richardson and Jacobs, Rough Guide to Egypt, p. 208.

96 Guidebooks see this type of tourist as proof of the fact that travel is a ‘global benefit’ that offers ‘opportunities for greater contact and awareness among people’. See Firestone et al., Lonely Planet Egypt, pp. 480, 524; Richardson and Jacobs, Rough Guide to Egypt, p. 28.

97 Lisle, ‘Humanitarian Travels’, p. 171.

98 UNHRC, Report of the Special Rapporteur on the Promotion and Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms while Countering Terrorism, Mission to Egypt, pp. 14–16, 18; Carr, ‘UN Expert Issues Damning Report on Egypt's Counterterrorism Measures’.

99 Ibid., p. 12.

100 Ibid., pp. 20–3.

101 Ibid., pp. 10–11; Carr, ‘UN Expert Issues Damning Report on Egypt's Counterterrorism Measures’.

102 UNHRC, Report of the Special Rapporteur on the Promotion and Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms while Countering Terrorism, Mission to Egypt, p. 7.

103 Ibid., p. 5; Carr, ‘UN Expert Issues Damning Report on Egypt's Counterterrorism Measures’.

104 Samer al-Atrush, ‘Egypt Military to Widen State of Emergency’, AFP (12 September 2011), available at: {http://www.google.com/hostednews/afp/article/ALeqM5gC0xgXy1LelXX6mYEGGHQBiYOMBQ?docIdCNG.37f490980793ed822010b69c4858a6ab.411} accessed 6 October 2011.

105 Ong, Neoliberalism as Exception, p. 16. I expand more on this point in the next section with reference to Ong's work, which focuses on the economic logics that define citizenship in contemporary liberalism.

106 The UK Home Secretary announced in January 2011 that ‘control orders’ would be replaced by ‘Terrorism Prevention and Investigation Measures’ by the end of the year. These measures have been critiqued, however, for being ‘little more than “control orders lite”’. See ‘Theresa May: Control Orders To Be replaced’, BBC News (26 January 2011), available at: {http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-12287074} accessed 6 October 2011.

107 Home Office, Pursue Prevent Protect Prepare, p. 67.

108 Dominic Casciani, ‘Terror suspects “able to sue” over control orders’, BBC News (28 July 2010), available at: {http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-10788933} 6 October 2011.

109 Home Office, Pursue Prevent Protect Prepare, pp. 68–9.

110 Ibid., pp. 68–9.

111 Ibid., pp. 72–3, 69.

112 See Home Office, Pursue Prevent Protect Prepare, p. 157. CONTEST explicitly argues that ‘the duty on all of us – Government, citizens and communities – is to challenge those who, for whatever reason or cause, reject the rights to which we are committed, scorn the institutions and values of our parliamentary democracy, dismiss the rule of law and promote intolerance and discrimination’ (p. 87).

113 Kundnani, Spooked, p. 40.

114 Former British Communities Minister Hazel Blears stated in 2009 that ‘this country is proud of its tradition of fair play and good manners, welcoming of diversity, tolerant of others. This is a great strength. But the pendulum has swung too far’. Kundnani, Spooked, p. 21.

115 Razack, Casting Out, p. 12.

116 Firestone et al., Lonely Planet Egypt, p. 126.

117 Ibid., pp. 22–8.

118 Kuppinger, ‘Pyramids and Alleys’; Said, Orientalism, p. 86; Wynn, Pyramids and Nightclubs, p. 24; Bryce, Derek, ‘Repackaging Orientalism: Discourse on Egypt and Turkey in British Outbound Tourism’, Tourist Studies, 7:2 (2007), pp. 165–91, 177, 178CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

119 Lisle, The Global Politics of Contemporary Travel Writing, pp. 204–6.

120 Ibid., p. 217.

121 Ibid.

122 Firestone et al., Lonely Planet Egypt, p. 5.

123 Bryce, ‘Repackaging Orientalism’, p. 180.

124 Lisle, ‘Humanitarian Travels’, p. 162.

125 Firestone et al., Lonely Planet Egypt, p. 156.

126 Mitchell, Timothy, Colonizing Egypt (Berkeley; Los Angeles: University of California Press, 1988), pp. 23, 26Google Scholar.

127 Ibid., pp. 21–7.

128 Ibid., p. 26.

129 Firestone et al., Lonely Planet Egypt, p. 532.

130 Richardson and Jacobs, Rough Guide to Egypt, p. 93.

131 Timothy Mitchell, Colonizing Egypt, pp. 20, 24, 28.

132 These include ‘Flaubert in Egypt: A Sensibility on Tour’, ‘A Thousand Miles up the Nile’, ‘Letters from Egypt’ (Firestone et al., Lonely Planet Egypt, p. 19), and ‘The Manners and Customs of the Modern Egyptians’ (Richardson and Jacobs, Rough Guide to Egypt, p. 803).

133 Gregory, Derek, ‘Scripting Egypt: Orientalism and the Cultures of Travel’, in Duncan, James and Gregory, Derek (eds), Writes of Passage: Reading Travel Writing (London; New York: Routledge, 1999), pp. 114–50Google Scholar; Said, Orientalism; Mitchell, Colonizing Egypt, pp. 21–31, 33.

134 Said, Orientalism, pp. 1–6, 16–17, 34.

135 Said, Orientalism, p. 49.

136 See Richardson and Jacobs, Rough Guide to Egypt, pp. 44, 80, 31; Firestone et al., Lonely Planet Egypt, pp. 79, 83, 88–9, 90. Gregory draws similar parallels between nineteenth and twentieth-century writings on Egypt and contemporary tourism representations of Egypt that suggest nostalgia for, and a (re)performance of, colonial cultures of travel and the occupation of corresponding subject positions. See Gregory, Derek, ‘Colonial Nostalgia and Cultures of Travel: Spaces of Constructed Visibility in Egypt’, in AlSayyad, Nezar (ed.), Consuming Tradition, Manufacturing Heritage: Global Norms and Urban Forms in the Age of Tourism (London: Routledge, 2001), pp. 111–51Google Scholar.

137 The LP argues that the British protectorate was imposed to help restore order to Egypt's mismanaged financial situation. It points out the British protectorate's positive role in Egypt, detailing how it improved Egypt's finances, bureaucracy and infrastructure. Both guidebooks acknowledge, however, that European politicians and banks exploited Egypt's weak economic condition for the benefit of UK foreign and economic policy. See Firestone et al., Lonely Planet Egypt, pp. 40–1; Richardson and Jacobs, Rough Guide to Egypt, p. 777.

138 Said argues that Americans reproduce Orientalist discourses especially through government, businesses, media, and popular culture representations of Arabs and Islam, which justify violence against the inherent threat they pose to the West. Said, Orientalism, pp. 284–7, 300–1; Said, Edward W., Covering Islam: How the Media and the Experts Determine How We See the Rest of the World (London: Vintage Books, 1997), pp. 512, 2830Google Scholar.

139 F. Robert Hunter, ‘Tourism and Empire’.

140 Lisle, The Global Politics of Contemporary Travel Writing, pp. 207, 209.

141 Ibid., pp. 210, 213.

142 Derek Gregory, The Colonial Present, p. 7.

143 See Gikandi, Simon, Maps of Englishness: Writing Identity in the Culture of Colonialism (New York: Columbia University Press, 1996), pp. 35, 7, 8Google Scholar. Gikandi highlights how liberalism, which professes to serve a universal constituency, is predicated on and continues to reproduce, systematic political exclusions.

144 Gikandi, Maps of Englishness, pp. 9, 28, 31, 33.

145 Ibid., p. 49.

146 Razack, Casting Out, p. 95; Kundnani, Spooked, p. 7; Meer, Nasar and Modood, Tariq, ‘The Multicultural State We're In: Muslims, “Multiculture” and the “Civic Re-balancing” of British Multiculturalism’, Political Studies, 57:3 (2009), pp. 473–97, 2, 9CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

147 Meer and Modood, ‘The Multicultural State We're In’, pp. 11–12, 6.

148 Gikandi, Maps of Englishness, p. 7.

149 Ibid., p. 8.

150 Vitalis, ‘Middle East on the Edge of the Pleasure Periphery’, p. 5; Mitchell, ‘Making the Nation’, pp. 213–14; Wynn, Pyramids and Nightclubs, pp. 24, 60, 69–70.

151 Mitchell, ‘Making the Nation’; Elsheshtawy, ‘Urban Transformations’; Kuppinger, ‘Pyramids and Alleys’; Williams, ‘Reconstructing Islamic Cairo’; Wynn, Pyramids and Nightclubs.

152 Kuppinger, ‘Pyramids and Alleys’, Williams, ‘Reconstructing Islamic Cairo’; Wynn, Pyramids and Nightclubs, pp. 69–70.

153 Wynn, Pyramids and Nightclubs, p. 71.

154 Reid, Donald M., ‘Nationalizing the Pharaonic Past: Egyptology, Imperialism, and Egyptian Nationalism, 1922–1952’, in Janowski, James and Gershoni, Israel (eds), Rethinking Nationalism in the Arab Middle East (New York: Columbia University Press, 1997), pp. 127–59, 128–9, 138Google Scholar.

155 Reid, Donald M., ‘Nationalizing the Pharaonic Past: Egyptology, Imperialism, and Egyptian Nationalism, 1922–1952’, in Janowski, James and Gershoni, Israel (eds), Rethinking Nationalism in the Arab Middle East (New York: Columbia University Press, 1997), pp. 127–59, 128–9, 138Google Scholar.

156 Reid, ‘Nationalizing the Pharaonic Past’, pp. 145, 148; Jankowski, James, ‘Arab Nationalism in “Nasserism” and Egyptian State Policy, 1952–1958’, in Janowski, James and Gershoni, Israel (eds), Rethinking Nationalism in the Arab Middle East (New York: Columbia University Press, 1997), pp. 150–67, 151, 155Google Scholar.

157 Along with liberalisation and an alliance with the West, this move also included peace with Israel and controlled democratisation. See Ibrahim, Saad Eddin, ‘An Islamic Alternative in Egypt: The Muslim Brotherhood and Sadat’, in Saad Eddin Ibrahim, Egypt, Islam and Democracy: Critical Essays (Cairo: The American University in Cairo Press, 2002), pp. 3551, 37–9Google Scholar.

158 Unlike Nasser, Sadat promoted pride in both Egypt's civilisation and Islamic identity. See Reid, ‘Nationalizing the Pharaonic Past’, p. 149. He promoted himself as a ‘believer president’, reconciled and actively engaged with the Muslim Brotherhood who had been banned under Nasser's regime (Ibrahim, ‘An Islamic Alternative in Egypt’, pp. 36, 46), and changed the constitution to emphasise Sharia law (Golia, City of Sand, p. 198). This was part of Sadat's attempt after Nasser's death ‘to consolidate his power in the face of many detractors – Nasserites, leftists, and Pan-Arabists’. See Ibrahim, Saad Eddin, ‘The Changing Face of Egypt's Islamic Activism’, in Saad Eddin Ibrahim, Egypt, Islam and Democracy: Critical Essays (Cairo: The American University in Cairo Press, 2002), pp. 6979, 71Google Scholar and to distance himself from the Soviet Union in order to build closer ties with the West (Ibrahim, ‘An Islamic Alternative in Egypt’, pp. 38, 45). At the same time, Sadat gave gifts of Pharaonic antiquities to foreign political figures and was carrying a ‘gold-enamelled staff with a lotus on top’ on the day he was assassinated (Golia, City of Sand, pp. 121–3). Sadat now rests beneath a pyramid-shaped monument adorned with a quotation from the Koran (Reid, ‘Nationalizing the Pharaonic Past’, p. 149), testament to the complex, rather than purely binary, relationship between Pharaonic and Islamic nationalisms during Sadat's regime.

159 Ibrahim, ‘An Islamic Alternative in Egypt’, pp. 35, 42; Ibrahim, Saad Eddin, ‘The Vindication of Sadat in the Arab World’, in Saad Eddin Ibrahim, Egypt, Islam and Democracy: Critical Essays (Cairo: The American University in Cairo Press, 2002), pp. 201–23, 212Google Scholar. Arrests in the month before his death, however, targeted Sadat's entire religious and secular political opposition (Ibrahim, ‘The Vindication of Sadat in the Arab World’, p. 212).

160 Wynn, Pyramids and Nightclubs, pp. 80–1.

161 Much of the opposition towards Sadat was based on the economic injustices and exclusions that were a result of his liberalisation policies. See Ibrahim, ‘An Islamic Alternative in Egypt’, p. 40; Ibrahim, ‘The Vindication of Sadat in the Arab World’, p. 212, as well as what were seen as half-hearted moves towards democratisation, paralleled by civil rights violations and widespread corruption by elites. See Ibrahim, ‘An Islamic Alternative in Egypt’, pp. 41–2. Islamic groups were also opposed to Sadat's ban on the formation of religious political parties. See Ibrahim, ‘An Islamic Alternative in Egypt’, pp. 42, 46, and his conciliation with Israel, a move seen as supporting Western imperialism. See Ibrahim, ‘The Vindication of Sadat in the Arab World’, p. 209.

162 Mitchell, ‘Making the Nation’, pp. 222, 228.

163 Manfred B. Steger and Ravi K. Roy, Neoliberalism, pp. 2–3.

164 Ibid., p. 12.

165 Ong, Neoliberalism as Exception, pp. 4, 16.

166 Ibid., pp. 3–4, 16.

167 Wynn, Pyramids and Nightclubs, pp. 75–6.

168 Ong, Neoliberalism as Exception, pp. 5, 7, 16.

169 Ibid., p. 4.

170 Ibid., p. 7.

171 Ibid., p. 6, emphasis added.

172 Denis, ‘Cairo as Neo-Liberal Capital?’

173 Ibid., pp. 54–5, 59–60, 62, 65.

174 Ibid., pp. 57–8.

175 Ibid., p. 60.

176 Singerman and Amar, ‘Introduction’, p. 22.

177 Ong, Neoliberalism as Exception, pp. 3–4, 5.

178 Singerman and Amar, ‘Introduction’, pp. 21–2.

179 Denis, ‘Cairo as Neo-Liberal Capital?’, p. 51.