This article examines the memorial discourses surrounding the massacre that occurred on 26 March 1962 when, in the week following the Franco-FLN ceasefire, French soldiers opened fire on a demonstration of unarmed European settler civilians, killing 46 and wounding 150. Largely unknown amongst wider French society, references to the massacre have become a staple of the pied-noir activist discourse of victimhood, often advanced as evidence that they had no choice but to leave Algeria in 1962. The article draws on French and Algerian press articles, as well as online, print, and film publications produced by the repatriated European population. It reveals how settlers' narratives first dehistoricized the massacre and then invested it with a s...
International audienceThis contribution is focused on the end of French Algeria and its context of v...
International audienceThis contribution is focused on the end of French Algeria and its context of v...
International audienceThis contribution is focused on the end of French Algeria and its context of v...
This article examines the memorial discourses surrounding the massacre that occurred on 26 March 196...
This article examines the memorial discourses surrounding the massacre that occurred on 26 March 196...
International audienceIn the Algerian War of Independence, both the colony and metropolitan France w...
The often nostalgically reconstructed and diverse city of Oran, Algeria, is also the site of horrifi...
International audienceIn the Algerian War of Independence, both the colony and metropolitan France w...
This article seeks to trace the evolving relationship between the collective memories of the pied-no...
Rejecting notions of inherent violence, this article focuses upon the large numbers of Algerians fro...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Manchester University Pr...
The Franco-Algerian War (195462) was a long, tremendously hard-fought, dirty war of decolonisation, ...
International audienceThis contribution is focused on the end of French Algeria and its context of v...
International audienceThis contribution is focused on the end of French Algeria and its context of v...
On the 17th of October 1961, 30,000 Muslims gathered throughout the streets of Paris in the peaceful...
International audienceThis contribution is focused on the end of French Algeria and its context of v...
International audienceThis contribution is focused on the end of French Algeria and its context of v...
International audienceThis contribution is focused on the end of French Algeria and its context of v...
This article examines the memorial discourses surrounding the massacre that occurred on 26 March 196...
This article examines the memorial discourses surrounding the massacre that occurred on 26 March 196...
International audienceIn the Algerian War of Independence, both the colony and metropolitan France w...
The often nostalgically reconstructed and diverse city of Oran, Algeria, is also the site of horrifi...
International audienceIn the Algerian War of Independence, both the colony and metropolitan France w...
This article seeks to trace the evolving relationship between the collective memories of the pied-no...
Rejecting notions of inherent violence, this article focuses upon the large numbers of Algerians fro...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Manchester University Pr...
The Franco-Algerian War (195462) was a long, tremendously hard-fought, dirty war of decolonisation, ...
International audienceThis contribution is focused on the end of French Algeria and its context of v...
International audienceThis contribution is focused on the end of French Algeria and its context of v...
On the 17th of October 1961, 30,000 Muslims gathered throughout the streets of Paris in the peaceful...
International audienceThis contribution is focused on the end of French Algeria and its context of v...
International audienceThis contribution is focused on the end of French Algeria and its context of v...
International audienceThis contribution is focused on the end of French Algeria and its context of v...