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The Body Besieged - The Embodiment of Historical Memory in Nina Bouraoui and Leila Sebbar (Hardcover)
Loot Price: R2,394
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The Body Besieged - The Embodiment of Historical Memory in Nina Bouraoui and Leila Sebbar (Hardcover)
Series: After the Empire: The Francophone World and Postcolonial France
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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The Body Beseiged: The Embodiment of Historical Memory in Nina
Bouraoui and Leila Sebbar by Helen Vassallo brings together the
work of two important contemporary writers, Nina Bouraoui and Leila
Sebbar. Both authors embody a significant historical divide (they
are half French and half Algerian), and each author's work returns
unfailingly to the legacy of opposition engendered by the colonial
past that France and Algeria share: neither Bouraoui nor Sebbar
claims any intention to write about the Algerian War of
Independence, and yet its impact is felt throughout all of the
texts chosen for discussion. This inescapable omnipresence of the
Algerian War is conceptualized here as "embodied memory," a
corporeal impulse to write about a war whose legacy is transmitted
to these "second-generation" writers rather than a conscious
decision to engage with the historical aspect of their personal
heritage. Both authors suffer a culturally imposed
"de-territorialization" in their life and their early
autobiographical narratives, and both subsequently undergo a
voluntary "displacement," undertaking literal and psychological
journeys to map out routes towards a sense of self, of belonging,
and ultimately of "re-territorialization." However, the analysis
reveals how this move from de-territorialization to
re-territorialization is accompanied by a shift from
internalization (through memory and silence) to externalization
(via articulation and community): rather than using the individual
as symbolic of the universal, Bouraoui's and Sebbar's life writing
acknowledges that their experience begins with a universal,
historical, or social context, and represents a personal act of
remembrance which is key to the recovery of historical memory, and
to the negotiation of an appropriate space for this memory. At a
time of "reconciliation" and remembrance, the analysis exposes and
probes open wounds in the Franco-Algerian relationship through a
close focus on the autobiographical writings of two authors who
embody both (hi)stories, and whose texts represent a site of this
"embodied memory."
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