In "Land and Blood, " his second novel, the Algerian-Kabyle
writer Mouloud Feraoun offers a detailed portrait of life for
Algerian Kabyles in the 1920s and 1930s through the story of a
Kabyle-Berber man, Amer. Like many Kabyle men of the 1930s, Amer
leaves his village to work in the coal mines of France. While in
France, he inadvertently kills his own uncle in an accident that
sets in motion forces of betrayal and revenge once he returns
home.
Unlike "The Poor Man's Son, " his first fictional work, "Land
and Blood" is not autobiographical" but is rather the first in a
series of novels Feraoun planned to write about immigrant ties
between France and Algeria in the years leading up to World War II.
Through Amer's story, Feraoun unveils what daily life was like in a
poor village of colonial-era Algeria. Published in 1953, a year
before the outbreak of the Algerian War, "Land and Blood" provides
a fascinating account of Muslim, Berber-Arab social, cultural, and
religious practices of rural Algeria in the pre-independence
era.
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