French 262 - AFTER ALGERIA: REV,RPBLC, RACE

Spring
2015
01
4.00
Jonathan Gosnell
MWF 10:00-10:50
Smith College
40444-S15
FORD 015
jgosnell@smith.edu
For the last two centuries, one could argue that it is the Franco-Algerian relationship that has been decisive in the construction of modern France. From the colonial conquest in the early 19th century through independence in 1962, Algeria has evoked passions on both sides of the Mediterranean Sea, passions frequently resulting in violence that has not entirely subsided. Memory of a conflictual present and past has required continual mediation among involved actors. In the 50-plus years that have passed since Algerian independence, France and the French have increasingly confronted echoes of the colonial past as a result of pervasive debates around immigration, multiculturalism and national identity. We explore a post-Algerian French society seemingly marked permanently by its Algerian experience through a variety of perspectives and readings. Can a late 20th-century discourse of socioeconomic, cultural, ethnic and religious diversity, all shaped by the Algerian episode, be reconciled with Republican norms? To what extent has the experience in/of Algeria transformed contemporary French culture? In what ways can one speak of the Algerian experience in revolutionary terms?
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