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The Politics of Frenchness in Colonial Algeria, 1930-1954 (Hardcover)
Loot Price: R2,287
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The Politics of Frenchness in Colonial Algeria, 1930-1954 (Hardcover)
Series: Rochester Studies in African History and the Diaspora
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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An examination of French citizenship and cultural identity in
Algeria during the last quarter-century of colonial rule. In recent
years, a multicultural society and changing conceptions of French
identity have been the source of considerable debate in
scholarship, literature and the media in France. This book examines
equally contested definitionsof French identity from the past, but
not those forged within the borders of the French 'Hexagon,' as
French geographic space is sometimes called. It is the study of
French sentiment in colonial Algeria of the 1930s, 1940s, and
1950s, during the last quarter century of colonial rule in North
Africa. It seeks to uncover elements of French identity that were
generated past the Pyrenees and the Alps, beyond the bordering
Atlantic Ocean, English Channel and Mediterranean Sea, outside the
physical space so central to "Frenchness." It asks whether
far-reaching state institutions could transform indigenous and
settler populations in colonial Algeria -- Europeans, Jews and
Muslims -- intoFrench men and women. It examines what these
individuals wrote of French sentiment in colonial Algeria. Did they
articulate alternative definitions of French identity? The colonial
"periphery" is clearly quite central to France'sevolving
postcolonial sense of self. Colonial Algerian heterogeneity and the
country's unique relationship to France make it an especially rich
site in which to study French national and cultural identities.
French military conquest and the occupation of the North African
coast established one of the oldest and largest settler colonies
within the French Empire. Unlike other colonies, Algeria lay
relatively close to metropolitan France, a daylong journey by ship
from Marseilles. No colony other than Algeria was granted French
departmental status. No other land administered under the auspices
of the French Empire had as numerous a European settler population,
many of whom becamenaturalized French citizens. This study suggests
that although Algeria had become officially French, "Algerie
francaise", even at the pinnacle of its acceptance, was more
diverse and more contested than its title suggests.
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