Algerian War, Sociology of Science, Colonialism, Postcolonialism, Edward Said, French Colonization, Independence Movement, FLN, Pieds-noirs
The Algerian War's historical context and its impact on the country's independence, exploring the unequal management and underlying resentment that led to the conflict.
[...] Ici Alger: Europe n°1, Episode the outbreak [podcast] March 2022 [20/04/2024] https://podcasts.google.com/feed/aHR0cHM6Ly93d3cuZXVyb3BlMS5mci9yc3MvcG9kY2FzdHMvaWNpLWFsZ2VyLWV1cm9wZS1uMS54bWw/episode/ZnIuZXVyb3BlMS5wb2RjYXN0cy80MDk5ODI1?ep=14 4. Law No. 99-882 of October relating to the substitution, of the expression "to operations carried out in North Africa", of the expression "to the Algerian War or to the fighting in Tunisia and Morocco" updated on October [23/04/2024]" https://www.legifrance.gouv.fr/loda/id/JORFTEXT000000578132/ 5. Raphaëlle Branche, the Algerian War: a pacified history? Editions du Seuil: October 2005. https://books.google.fr/books?hl=fr&lr=&id=A-CTBQAAQBAJ&oi=fnd&pg=PT5&dq=guerre+d%27alg%C3%A9rie&ots=ZUcYLoSqiS&sig=7sITvwHN7-EkHkG4e-BCkdRoPVY#v=onepage&q=guerre%20d'alg%C3%A9rie&f=false 6. Report by Benjamin STORA, the memorial questions related to colonization and the Algerian War. For President Emmanuel MACRON, January 2020. [...]
[...] https://www.elysee.fr/admin/upload/default/0001/09/0586b6b0ef1c2fc2540589c6d56a1ae63a65d97c.pdf Sources: 7. Anne-Claire Collier, the missed translation of Edward Saïd in France. In Sociologie 2020/4 (Vol. pages 399 to 413, Éditions Presses Universitaires de France. DOI 10.3917/socio.114.0399 8. J.-P. Rioux and J.-F. Sirinelli, the Algerian War and French intellectuals. [...]
[...] Editions complexe. Available at: https://books.google.fr/books?hl=fr&lr=&id=OW_7pvGOxKUC&oi=fnd&pg=PA191&dq=guerre+d%27alg%C3%A9rie&ots=_LJnjvhsfC&sig=1BsmmHiHwzndZCKglfD2aPYpvMw#v=onepage&q=guerre%20d'alg%C3%A9rie&f=false 9. « Ouvrir le canon du savoir et reconnaître la différence », introduction to the collective work of Boaventure de Sousa Santos, Another knowledge is possible (2007) 10. Patrick Weil, The status of Muslims in colonial Algeria: a French nationality distorted. In Histoire de la justice 2005/1 (N° pages 93 to 109. Available at: https://www.cairn.info/revue-histoire-de-la-justice-2005-1-page-93.htmcontenu=resume 11. « T'as qui in history?", The Algerian War [podcast] March 2022. [...]
[...] After abdicating for the first time in 1837 before resuming the struggle, the country was definitively colonized in 1847 (11). As can be seen from this bloody conquest in two stages, this colony did not bode well for the future. Subsequently, despite the French promise "not to harm the freedom of the inhabitants of all classes and their religion" and pacification, riots and conflicts never completely ceased. On the contrary, a major immigration took place in Algeria, making it France's first settler colony. [...]
[...] The naturalization of an Algerian Muslim is more complicated than that of a foreigner or a Jew (10). In his book, Patrick Weihl summarizes things as follows: 'This assignment to ethnic or religious origin, which maintains the converted Muslim in the status of native as long as he has not been naturalized (which is a decision of the public authority), shows the ethno-political character, and not simply civil or religious, of this status. A Muslim cannot leave this status unless he requests it and unless the State accepts it, after having investigated as in a classic naturalization procedure.' The 'indigenous Muslims' are deliberately kept apart from French citizenship, which goes against the developments in other French colonies. [...]
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