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Algerians without Borders - The Making of a Global Frontier Society (Hardcover)
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Algerians without Borders - The Making of a Global Frontier Society (Hardcover)
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"Maps a fascinating and far-flung global frontier that Algerians
have crossed over for centuries. This is not only a history of the
modern and contemporary Algerian diaspora but also an instructive
study of political, social, cultural, and economic encounters and
negotiations that occur at the interstices of civilizations.
Christelow contributes an impressive and erudite narrative that
widens and enriches the corpus of modern Algerian
historiography."--Phillip C. Naylor, author of North Africa: A
History from Antiquity to the Present This account of Algeria
through its migratory history begins in the last quarter of the
eighteenth century by looking at forced migration through the slave
trade. It moves through the colonial era and continues into
Algeria's turbulent postcolonial experience. In Algerians without
Borders, Allan Christelow examines the factors that have drawn or
pushed Algerians to cross borders, both literal and metaphoric. He
provides an in-depth analysis of the results of these crossings:
from problematic efforts to secure external support for political
projects, to building interfaith dialogue and the exploration of
new ideas, to the emergence of new communities. He also
investigates the return of border crossers to Algeria and the
challenges they face in adapting to new environments, whether
negotiating alliances, engaging in dialogue, or simply seeking
legal acceptance. Christelow concludes with a discussion of the
last few decades of Algerian history. He explores how Algerian
intellectuals operated outside of the country's borders, spurred on
by the rise of Islamism as well as by freer dialogues with Western
powers, specifically Britain and the United States. The result is
an alternate history of Algeria that demonstrates just how much its
citizens' engagement with other societies has transformed the
country. Allan Christelow, professor of history at Idaho State
University, is the author of Muslim Law Courts and the French
Colonial State in Algeria and Thus Ruled Emir Abbas.
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