1st Edition

Nation, Society and Culture in North Africa

Edited By James McDougall Copyright 2003
    194 Pages
    by Routledge

    The essays in this volume explore the complexities of the relationship between states, social groups and individuals in contemporary North Africa, as expressed through the politics, culture and history of nationhood.
    From Morocco to Libya, from bankers to refugees, from colonialism to globalisation, a range of individual studies examines how North Africans have imagined and made their world in the twentieth century.

    Introduction: History, Culture, Politics of the Nation  1. Algeria/Morocco: The Passions of the Past, Representations of the Nation that Unite and Divide  2. Ideologies of the Nation in Tunisian Cinema  3. Bendana: Stories on the Road from Fez to Marrakesh - Oral History on the Margins of National Identity  4. Echoes of National Liberation: Turkey Viewed from the Maghrib in the 1920s  5. Libya's Refugees, their Places of Exile and the Shaping of their National Idea  6. Martyrs and Patriots: Ethnic, National and Transnational Dimensions of Kabyle Politics  7. Moroccan Women's Narratives of Liberation: A Passive Revolution?  8. Citizens and Subjects in the Bank: Corporate Visions of Modern Art and Moroccan Identity  9. The Nations "Unknowing Other": Three Intellectuals and the Culture(s) of being Algerian, or the Impossibility of Subaltern Studies in Algeria

    Biography

    James McDougall