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         Algerian History:     more books (75)
  1. Algerian Reflections on Arab Crises (Middle East Monographs) by Ali El-Kenz, 1992-02
  2. The Algerian Destiny of Albert Camus by Mohamed-lakhdar Maougal, 2006-03-15
  3. The French Conquest of Algiers, 1830: An Algerian Oral Tradition (Research in International Studies Africa Series) by Alf Andrew Heggoy, 1986-12
  4. Women Without Men: Gender and Marginality in an Algerian Town by Willy Jansen, 1997-08
  5. The Algerian Problem by Edward Behr, 1976-02-27
  6. Politics, Language and Gender in the Algerian Arabic Novel (North African Studies, 2) by Debbie Cox, 2002-08
  7. Call of Conscience, The: French Protestant Responses to the Algerian War, 1954-1962 (Editions SR) by Geoffrey Adams, 1998-05-22
  8. Francis Jeanson: A Dissident Intellectual from the French Resistance to the Algerian War by Marie-Pierre Ulloa, 2008-04-16
  9. Representing Montreal's Algerian immigrants on stage and screen.: An article from: Quebec Studies by Jane Moss, 2004-09-22
  10. France and the Algerian Conflict (Leeds Studies in Democratization) by Camille Bonora-Waisman, 2000-12
  11. Study Of Land And Milieu In The Works Of Algerian-born Writers Albert Camus, Mouloud Feraoun, and Mohammed Dib (North African Studies) by Fawzia Ahmad, 2005-05-30
  12. Algerian voices by Richard Munthe Brace, 1965
  13. Images of the Algerian War: French Fiction and Film, 1954-1992 by Philip Dine, 1995-02-09
  14. The Algerian War and the French Army, 1954-62: Experiences, Images, Testimonies

41. Project MUSE
consisting of colonialist overwriting of algerian history and Djebar s own overwriting (2) the reappropriation of algerian history written by the
http://muse.jhu.edu/journals/substance/v033/33.3erickson.html
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Login: Password: Your browser must have cookies turned on Erickson, John D. "Recasting Postcolonialism: Women Writing Between Worlds (review)"
SubStance - Issue 105 (Volume 33, Number 3), 2004, pp. 166-171
University of Wisconsin Press

Excerpt
SubStance

[Access article in PDF] In Recasting Postcolonialism: Women Writing Between Worlds, In her preface Donadey seeks to locate her own perspective. The "liminal position" of Djebar and Sebbar between two different worlds in which they were unable fully to find a place initially attracted her. Her own "personal positioning," formed by differences of class and gender, though situationally different from those of Djebar and Sebbar, has [End Page 166] sensitized her to the narratives of displacement of these writers. She confronts the problem of how someone brought up in Western culture can find a critical narrative that can serve as an alternative to Orientalism, a narrative that studies other peoples and cultures from "a libertarian, or a nonrepressive and nonmanipulative, perspective," as Edward Said terms it (cited, p. xiv).

42. MSN Encarta - Further Reading - Algeria
Scholarly examination of 20thcentury algerian history; analysis of culture, A scholarly look at Algeria s authoritarian history and the difficulties of
http://encarta.msn.com/readings_761554128/Algeria.html
Web Search: Encarta Home ... Upgrade your Encarta Experience Search Encarta Go to article Further Reading from Encarta Further Reading offers additional information about your topics. Algeria Also on Encarta Compare online degrees Train for a better career College life Encarta word of the day Algeria Ciment, James. Algeria: The Fundamentalist Challenge. Facts on File, 1997. Highly readable account of the factors that led to Algeria's civil war. Entelis, John P. Algeria: The Revolution Institutionalised. Westview, 1986. Scholarly examination of 20th-century Algerian history; analysis of culture, economy, politics, and foreign policy. Fanon, Frantz. Pref. Jean-Paul Sartre. Trans. Constance Farrington. The Wretched of the Earth. Grove, 1963, 1986. Classic portrayal of the psychological cost of revolution in Algeria. Fuller, Graham E. Algeria: The Next Fundamentalist State? Rand, 1996. Detailed history of Algeria's colonial struggle, the emergence of the National Liberation Front, and the emergence of the Islamic Salvation Front. Laremont, Ricardo Rene.

43. Sorry - We Can't Find That Page
The history of Algeria, like that of most nations, suggests themes and issues What came to be known in algerian history as the “revolution of a million
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  • 44. [Noticias] POLITICS : U.S. And France Begin A Great Game In Africa
    Algeria since the end of the bloody=20 war of independence in 1962, said the historic agreement will turn a=20= page in Frenchalgerian history.
    http://listas.rcp.net.pe/pipermail/noticias/2004-August/007898.html
    [Noticias] POLITICS : U.S. and France Begin a Great Game in Africa
    Sabina Astete astetesg@igc.org
    Wed, 11 Aug 2004 11:22:11 -0700

    45. History Of The Algerian Workers
    MIA history Algeria. history of algerian Independence. French Colonization For over 300 years Algeria was an autonomous province of the Ottoman Empire
    http://www.marxists.org/history/algeria/
    MIA History : Algeria

    History of Algerian Independence
    French Colonization: Under french domination, Algerians could not hold public meetings nor even leave their homes without permission. French state racism kept Algerians at the bottom of society, working as servants, unskilled labourers and peasants, while only French citizens or other whites were allowed skilled jobs and positions in the social institutions (from the police to the government). Friends of the Manifesto and Liberty See Messali Hadj Archive See Nothing is Lost , from Alger Républicain , June 1945
    and Common Declaration of the Socialist and Communist Parties of Algiers In 1947, fearful of the growing nationalistic uprisings in the wake of the second world war, the French government established a parliamentary assembly in Algeria, made up of half European and Algerian delegates, with the purpose of upholding French colonial rule. It did not last. In March of 1954, Ahmed Ben Bella , an ex-sergeant in the French army who was deported to Egypt for his leftist political beliefs, joined eight other Algerian exiles to form what would become the National Liberation Front (FLN) See Proclamation. To the Algerian people

    46. The Permanent Mission Of Algeria To The U.N.
    Some history Indicators Ferhat Abbas created “The Democratic Union of the algerian Manifesto’) In French. “l’Union Democrate du Manifeste Algerien (UDMA
    http://www.algeria-un.org/default.asp?doc=-history

    47. AllRefer.com - Algeria - Almoravids | Algerian Information Resource
    Earth Environment • history • Literature Arts • Health Medicine • People • Places • Plants Animals • Philosophy FRANCE IN ALGERIA, 18301962
    http://reference.allrefer.com/country-guide-study/algeria/algeria18.html
    You are here allRefer Reference Algeria
    History
    ...
    Algeria
    Algeria
    Almoravids
    The Almoravid movement developed early in the eleventh century among the Sanhaja of the western Sahara, whose control of trans-Saharan trade routes was under pressure from the Zenata Berbers in the north and the state of Ghana in the south. Yahya ibn Ibrahim al Jaddali, a leader of the Lamtuna tribe of the Sanhaja confederation, decided to raise the level of Islamic knowledge and practice among his people. To accomplish this, on his return from the hajj (Muslim pilgrimage to Mecca) in 1048-49, he brought with him Abd Allah ibn Yasin al Juzuli, a Moroccan scholar. In the early years of the movement, the scholar was concerned only with imposing moral discipline and a strict adherence to Islamic principles among his followers. Abd Allah ibn Yasin also became known as one of the marabouts, or holy persons (from al murabitun , "those who have made a religious retreat." Almoravids is the Spanish transliteration of al murabitun see Marabouts , this ch.).

    48. AllRefer.com - Algeria - Early History | Algerian Information Resource
    allRefer Reference provides detailed information on this topic. Browse through this article and follow related links for complete research.
    http://reference.allrefer.com/country-guide-study/algeria/algeria71.html
    You are here allRefer Reference Algeria
    History
    ...
    Algeria
    Algeria
    Early History
    During the seventh century, Muslim conquerors reached North Africa, and by the beginning of the eighth century the Berbers had been for the most part converted to Islam. Orthodox Sunni (see Glossary) Islam, the larger of the two great branches of the faith, is the form practiced by the overwhelming majority of Muslims in Algeria. Shia (see Glossary) Islam is not represented apart from a few members of the Ibadi sect, a Shia offshoot. Before the Arab incursions, most of the Berber inhabitants of the area's mountainous interior were pagan. Some had adopted Judaism, and in the coastal plains many had accepted Christianity under the Romans. A wave of Arab incursions into the Maghrib in the latter half of the seventh century and the early eighth century introduced Islam to parts of the area. One of the dominant characteristics of Islam in North Africa was the cult of holy men, or maraboutism. Marabouts were believed to have baraka , or divine grace, as reflected in their ability to perform miracles. Recognized as just and spiritual men, marabouts often had extensive followings locally and regionally. Muslims believed that

    49. Algerian Culture History And Archaeology
    algerian Culture history and Archaeology Culture history, archaeological sites, and other information related to the past of the modern country of Algeria.
    http://archaeology.about.com/library/atlas/blalgeria.htm
    zJs=10 zJs=11 zJs=12 zJs=13 zc(5,'jsc',zJs,9999999,'') About Homework Help Archaeology World Atlas ... Africa Algeria Homework Help Archaeology Essentials Ancient Daily Life ... Help zau(256,140,140,'el','http://z.about.com/0/ip/417/C.htm','');w(xb+xb+' ');zau(256,140,140,'von','http://z.about.com/0/ip/496/7.htm','');w(xb+xb);
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    Algerian Culture History and Archaeology
    Culture history, archaeological sites, and other information related to the past of the modern country of Algeria.
    Alphabetical
    Recent Up a category Algeria. The Religious at the Margins From the University of Laval's Anthropologie et Sociétés, a complete issue on Algeria. French and English. Algeria: Islam and the Arabs Online text of the History of Algeria; public domain document that you may copy, download, print and distribute as you see fit. From Melissa Snell, Medieval and Renaissance History at About. Algeria: The Roman Era Library of Carthage publication on Algeria, section on the Roman Era; from N.S. Gill, Ancient History at About. Cuicul From LexicOrient, a description of the Roman ruins of Cuicul, now called Djemila.

    50. Algerian Culture History And Archaeology
    Culture history, archaeological sites, and other information related to the past of the modern country of Algeria .
    http://archaeology.about.com/b/a/180012.htm
    zJs=10 zJs=11 zJs=12 zJs=13 zc(5,'jsc',zJs,9999999,'') About Homework Help Archaeology Homework Help ... Help zau(256,140,140,'el','http://z.about.com/0/ip/417/C.htm','');w(xb+xb+' ');zau(256,140,140,'von','http://z.about.com/0/ip/496/7.htm','');w(xb+xb);
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    Culture history, archaeological sites, and other information related to the past of the modern country of Algeria. Email to a Friend
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    51. Reader's Companion To Military History - - Algerian War
    algerian War. November 1954March 1962. Although nationalist agitation and rebellion had often marked the history of Algeria, the series of attacks on
    http://college.hmco.com/history/readerscomp/mil/html/mh_001500_algerianwar.htm
    Entries Publication Data Maps Contributors ... World Civilizations Reader's Companion to Military History
    Algerian War
    November 1954 March 1962 Although nationalist agitation and rebellion had often marked the history of Algeria, the series of attacks on police stations and government offices that occurred on the night of November 1, 1954, chiefly in remote areas of Constantine Province, passed almost without notice in Paris. By 1956, however, large tracts of the countryside had fallen under rebel control, and a terrorist campaign had paralyzed Algiers. The French response to the crisis was hamstrung by the one million Algerians of European extraction, the pieds noirs , who sabotaged reforms designed to give Muslims a stake in French Algeria. Backed by an important section of the French army, the pieds noirs locked French policy into a sterile search for a "military" victory over the insurgents. On an operational level, the French army applied counterinsurgency techniques with brutal efficiency. Barriers built along the frontiers of Morocco and Tunisia blocked resupply and reinforcement of the Armée de libération nationale (ALN) commands. Inside Algeria, over one million Muslims were "resettled" in government camps, while French officers organized militias to deny remote villages to the insurgents. Meanwhile, helicopter-borne elite units of paratroops and foreign legionnaires swooped down on ALN companies, often guided to their targets by French-led Muslim commandos who stalked ALN units in the countryside. Successful offensives in 1959 demonstrated beyond doubt that the French army had the military situation well in hand.

    52. History | McDougall Interview
    Your first book is history and the Culture of Nationalism in Algeria (2005). What is it about? The book is about how algerian writers and religious
    http://his.princeton.edu/people/e62/mcdougall_interview.html
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    McDougall Interview
    Return to profile How did you become interested in Algeria? In 1995 and 1996, while I was an undergraduate, I spent a year teaching English at a French secondary school in the northern suburbs of Marseille, which is a high-density housing area largely populated by immigrants from North Africa. In the months before I arrived there was a siege of a hijacked airliner at the Marseille airport and a bombing in the Paris metro; this was all related to the violence going on in Algeria. In response there was a huge antiterrorist crackdown focusing largely on areas like the one I was living in. There were police and soldiers everywhere, and there was also a very lively public debate about the presence of Muslim immigrants in France and about French policies toward North Africa. That was my first opportunity to observe up close the contemporary effects of the very difficult historical relationship between France and Algeria. Your first book is History and the Culture of Nationalism in Algeria (2005) . What is it about?

    53. Oxfam's Cool Planet - On The Line - Virtual Journey Through Algeria, History
    On the Line the history of Algeria. history, algerian flag. Cave painting. Cave painting of a hunter. Cave paintings in eastern Algeria,
    http://www.oxfam.org.uk/coolplanet/ontheline/explore/journey/algeria/history.htm
    Search Other Oxfam sites Cool Planet for Teacher Oxfam GB Make Trade Fair
    Cave painting of a hunter arid desert a people who have lived in the region for thousands of years. About 2,500 years ago the Phoenicians, a Middle-eastern seafaring people, established outposts in present-day Algeria. 2000 years ago, Algeria was part of the Roman Empire. In the 5 th th century, by an Arab invasion. Berber resistance to this invasion was led by a legendary woman warrior called Kahina. Arab conquest led to the establishment of Islam Conquest by Algeria and Turkey In the 16 th food and music – became interwoven into Algerian life. During this time, the Barbarossa (Redbeard) brothers and other pirates based in the Algerian coastal cities defended (and enriched) Algeria’s ports. Piracy continued along the "Barbary Coast", as it was known, until the early 19 th century, when the menace was finally subdued by the firepower of US and European navies.

    54. Oxfam's Cool Planet - On The Line - Virtual Journey Through Algeria, History, Pr
    On the Line Virtual journey through Algeria, history, printable version. algerian Muslims asked for help from the Ottoman (Turkish) Empire.
    http://www.oxfam.org.uk/coolplanet/ontheline/explore/journey/algeria/prthist.htm
    Rock painting found in Eastern Algeria n arid desert a people who have lived in the region for thousands of years. About 2,500 years ago the Phoenicians, a Middle-eastern seafaring people, established outposts in present-day Algeria. 2000 years ago, Algeria was part of the Roman Empire. In the 5 th th century, by an Arab invasion. Berber resistance to this invasion was led by a legendary woman warrior called Kahina. Arab conquest led to the establishment of Islam Conquest by Algeria and Turkey In the 16 th food and music – became interwoven into Algerian life. During this time, the Barbarossa (Redbeard) brothers and other pirates based in the Algerian coastal cities defended (and enriched) Algeria’s ports. Piracy continued along the "Barbary Coast", as it was known, until the early 19 th century, when the menace was finally subdued by the firepower of US and European navies. French colonisation France launched an invasion of Algeria with an attack on the capital Algiers in 1830. The invasion met with brave and stubborn resistance, led by the great general Abdelkadar, but by 1847 the French were in control of the whole country. Under French rule, non-French language and culture were suppressed. Land was claimed by French and other European settlers, and Algerian Muslims were denied many basic rights. In 1947, France granted Algerian Muslims citizenship of Algeria and France. It was too little, too late. A war of independence broke out in 1954, led by the FLN (National Liberation Front). The war claimed at least one million Algerian lives. Finally, in 1962, the French government offered Algerians a referendum. Six million voted for independence from France, and fewer than 20,000 against.

    55. Index Of /marxists/history/algeria
    1958/ 05Aug-2005 1035 - DIR 1960/ 05-Aug-2005 1035 - DIR 1961/ 05-Aug-2005 1035 - DIR 1963/ 22-Jul-2002 1805 - TXT algerian-communist-p.
    http://www2.cddc.vt.edu/marxists/history/algeria/
    Index of /marxists/history/algeria
    Name Last modified Size Description ... Parent Directory 08-Aug-2005 10:51 - 08-Aug-2005 10:50 - 08-Aug-2005 10:50 - 08-Aug-2005 10:50 - 08-Aug-2005 10:50 - 08-Aug-2005 10:50 - 08-Aug-2005 10:50 - 08-Aug-2005 10:50 - 08-Aug-2005 10:50 - 22-Jul-2002 18:05 - 27-May-2004 19:13 6k images/ 22-Jul-2002 18:05 - index.htm 14-Apr-2005 03:38 15k markup.rpt markup.txt 05-Aug-2005 10:32 0k movie/ 04-May-2004 02:30 - Apache/1.3.33 Server at www2.cddc.vt.edu Port 80

    56. History Of Algeria
    This mass settlement naturally provoked the resentment of algerian natives, A Europeanalgerian national identity distinct from that of France gradually
    http://www.ahtg.net/TpA/hisalger.html
    Algeria France's initial foothold in Algeria was purely accidental, precipitated by the vagaries of French internal politics: Fearing revolution, archreactionary King Charles X sent an expedition to the North African coast in order to avenge a slight made by the Bey of Algiers to a French enjoy, and in doing so to distract the general French population from his attempt to reestablish royal absolutism. Though the regime of Charles X quickly collapsed in the 1830 Revolution, his Algerian military expedition encountered remarkable success, quickly subduing the capital of a state long disliked by Europeans for its sponsorship of piracy in the Mediterranean. Due to these strategic considerations, and out of national pride, France decided to retain this new North African possession. Arab and Berber rebels fought the imposition of French sovereignty throughout the 1830's, but by 1840 enough of Algeria had been pacified by the French army for the territory to be truly French. The question of what to do with Algeria after its conquest vexed many French. Soon enough, though, the French government under Louis-Philippe I decided to develop Algeria as a colony of settlement . By 1848, almost a quarter-million settlers had been settled in the fertile lands along the Algerian coast, divided into three

    57. Portfolio: Algerian Air Force Thru History
    Portfolio algerian Air Force thru history By Tom Cooper RH Aug 5, 2004, 0403, Email this article Printer friendly page
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    Portfolio: Algerian Air Force thru History
    Aug 5, 2004, 04:03
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    Algeria received a total of 24 Il-28s, and these appear to have been in service for a relatively short period of time. Only few photographs are available, and all are from the mid-1960s. Exact desigantion of the unit that flew them and their base remain unknown. (All artworks by Tom Cooper unless otherwise stated)
    In the mid-1960s a number of Algerian Air Force aircraft have got unit insignia applied. In the case of this MiG-17F it is a black and yellow snake - and insignia reportedly developed under "Egyptian influence".
    The Egyptian influence was very strong within the QJJ through 1960s and in the early 1970s, so that Algerian aircraft frequently wore markings or even camouflage patterns developed from those used by the Egyptian Air Force. Such was the case with this and several other MiG-17Fs, all of which were camouflaged in "Nile Valley" pattern. The QJJ received around a dozen of MiG-15UTIs between November 1962 and 1965. Additional examples should have been supplied at later stages.

    58. Uncivil War -- Intellectuals And Identity Politics During The Decolonization Of
    Tracing the intellectual history of one of the most violent wars of European Indeed, the Frenchalgerian War occupies a seminal place in colonial and
    http://www.frontlist.com/detail/0812235886
    Search for Author/Title Keyword Title Author Publisher ISBN Featured Books in All Scholarly Subjects African American Studies African Studies American Studies Anthologies Anthropology Architecture Asian Studies Books on Books Chicago Cinema studies Media Studies Classical studies Critical Theory/Marxism Cultural Studies Geography Performance Studies Science studies Drama Economics Education Environmental studies Feminist theory/Women's study Fiction Folktales French Stuff General Interest Highlights History African African American American East Asia Eastern European European Latin American Medieval Middle East Russian South asian Southeast Asian Historiography Misc. History Humor International relations Journals Just for Fun Latin American/Caribbean St. Law Linguistics Literary Studies Literary Criticism Referenc Literary MOSTLY Theory Literary NOT Theory Mathematics Medicine/Health/AIDS Native American Studies Philosophy Photography Poetry Political Science/Sociology (Post)colonial studies Psychology Reference Foreign language reference General Reference Religious studies Black Theology Buddhist studies Islamic studies Biblical studies - New Test Biblical studies Old Test.

    59. Veiling Patterns
    algerianhistory; Click on photo frame for enlarged view of picture. Bethlehem; Click on photo frame for enlarged view of picture
    http://www.angelfire.com/sd/AnisahDavid/subpages/gallery.html
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    Egypt Click on photo frame for enlarged view of picture Click on photo frame for enlarged view of picture Click on photo frame for enlarged view of picture Africa: ethnographic drawings Click on photo frame for enlarged view of picture Algerian-history Click on photo frame for enlarged view of picture Bethlehem Click on photo frame for enlarged view of picture Juresalem Click on photo frame for enlarged view of picture Armenian woman Click on photo frame for enlarged view of picture Algeria-historic Click on photo frame for enlarged view of picture historical sketch of burial Click on photo frame for enlarged view of picture historical example of veil Click on photo frame for enlarged view of picture historic veil Click on photo frame for enlarged view of picture historic burial-veils illustrated Click on photo frame for enlarged view of picture historic veil Click on photo frame for enlarged view of picture Click on photo frame for enlarged view of picture Ireland-historic example of covering.

    60. The Hidden History Of The Algerian War
    The hidden history of the algerian war Only 10% of students were of algerian parentage in 1962? (1). It’s not a lot, but it’s better than nothing.
    http://mondediplo.com/2001/04/04algeriatorture
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    COLONIALISM THROUGH THE SCHOOL BOOKS
    The hidden history of the Algerian war By Maurice T Maschino This article is available to subscribers only.
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    Translated by Harry Forster

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