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French and Algerian Identities from Colonial Times to the Present A Century of Interaction DescriptionThese essays, by a range of British, French, and Algerian scholars, concentrate specifically on the distinctive cultural identities which have been created in each country due to interaction. General chapters offer methodological overviews and place the problematic within its historical context. Part One deals with the colonial period up to 1954, Part Two with the War of Independence, and Part Three with the post-colonial period since 1962. In each case, the shifting identities are explored from a variety of disciplinary perspectives. Reviews"This pluridisciplinary book raises a host of issues including demography, politics, literature and the FLN. Questions of identity and nationality are considered with reference to the harkis, the pieds-noirs and Algerian immigrants in France. . . . Benjamin Stora gives a fascinating account of the formation of a sense of identity amongst the disparate group of Algerian immigrants in post-war France and of the subsequent tendencies and struggles that divided the nationalist movement. André Nouschi, in a chapter with burning relevance today, traces the struggles within the FLN over secularism, Islam and Arab identity. Keith Sutton, in what is perhaps the most powerful chapter, considers the French Army's forced resettlement and displacement of up to half Algeria's rural population in its struggle against the FLN. He combines meticulous attention to detail with dispassionate analysis, yet still arouses our indignation. . . . the contributions are clear and well argued and throw fascinating light in what is a complex, multi-dimensional subject." - Modern and Contemporary France
ISBN10: 0-7734-9233-X ISBN13: 978-0-7734-9233-2 Pages: 264 Year: 1993
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