After completing his research for "Democracy in America," Alexis
de Tocqueville turned to the French consolidation of its empire in
North Africa, which he believed deserving of similar attention.
Tocqueville began studying Algerian history and culture, making two
trips to Algeria in 1841 and 1846. He quickly became one of
France's foremost experts on the country and wrote essays,
articles, official letters, and parliamentary reports on such
diverse topics as France's military and administrative policies in
North Africa, the people of the Maghrib, his own travels in
Algeria, and the practice of Islam. Throughout, Tocqueville
consistently defended the French imperial project, a position that
stands in tension with his admiration for the benefits of democracy
he witnessed in America.
Although Tocqueville never published a book-length study of
French North Africa, his various writings on the subject provide as
invaluable a portrait of French imperialism as "Democracy in
America" does of the Early Republic period in American history. In
"Writings on Empire and Slavery," Jennifer Pitts has selected and
translated nine of his most important dispatches on Algeria, which
offer startling new insights into both Tocqueville's political
thought and French liberalism's attitudes toward the political,
military, and moral aspects of France's colonial expansion. The
volume also includes six articles Tocqueville wrote during the same
period calling for the emancipation of slaves in France's Caribbean
colonies.
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