Algeria in France: Transpolitics, Race, and Nation

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Indiana University Press, 2004 - Algeria - 284 pages

Algerian migration to France began at the end of the 19th century, but in recent years France's Algerian community has been the focus of a shifting public debate encompassing issues of unemployment, multiculturalism, Islam, and terrorism. In this finely crafted historical and anthropological study, Paul A. Silverstein examines a wide range of social and cultural forms--from immigration policy, colonial governance, and urban planning to corporate advertising, sports, literary narratives, and songs--for what they reveal about postcolonial Algerian subjectivities. Investigating the connection between anti-immigrant racism and the rise of Islamist and Berberist ideologies among the "second generation" ("Beurs"), he argues that the appropriation of these cultural-political projects by Algerians in France represents a critique of notions of European or Mediterranean unity and elucidates the mechanisms by which the Algerian civil war has been transferred onto French soil.

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Contents

Immigration Politics in the New Europe
17
Colonization and the Production of Ethnicity
35
Migration Domesticity Urban Planning
76
Copyright

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About the author (2004)

Paul A. Silverstein is Assistant Professor of Anthropology at Reed College.

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