Anouar Abdel-Malek (Arabic: أنور عبد الملك), (23 October 1924 – 15 June 2012) was an Egyptian-French political scientist. He was a
pan-Arabist and
Marxist.[1][2]
Born to a
Coptic Christian family, Anouar Abdel-Malek gained a bachelor's degree in philosophy in 1954 from
Ain Shams University before studying for a doctorate at the
Sorbonne. He subsequently joined the
CNRS, becoming head of research there in 1970.[2]
Works
Égypte : société militaire, 1962. Translated by Charles Lam Markmann as Egypt: military society; the army regime, the left, and social change under Nasser, 1968.
Anthologie de la littérature arabe contemporaine, 1964
Idéologie et renaissance nationale, l'Égypte moderne, 1969
La Pensée politique arabe contemporaine, 1970. Translated by Michael Pallis as Contemporary Arab political thought, 1983
(ed.) Sociologie de l'impérialisme, 1971
La dialectique sociale, 1972. Translated by Mike Gonzalez as Social dialectics, 2 vols., 1980.
Nation and revolution, 1981
(ed. with Miroslav Pečujlićand Gregory Blue) Science and technology in the transformation of the world, 1982
(ed. with Ānisujjāmāna) Culture and thought in the transformation of the world, 1983.