This thesis seeks to discuss the ways in which canonical Francophone Algerian authors, writing in the late-colonial period (1945 – 1962), namely Kateb Yacine, Mohammed Dib, Mouloud Feraoun, Mouloud Mammeri and Assia Djebar, approached the representation of Algerian women through literature. The thesis, divided into five chapters, each focusing on the late-colonial oeuvre of one writer, initially makes use of Bourdieusian conceptions relating to a gendered "dissymétrie fondementale" and concomitant Spivakian notions of representation, to argue that a masculine domination of public fields of representation contributed to, if not ensured, a post-colonial marginalization of women and a reduction of their public role. However, it is the principa...
Silence in the universe of women in the Maghreb is a common topic in the Francophone literature. The...
This chapter forms part of an inter-disciplinary collection on gender studies, discourses and identi...
This article was a commissioned piece for a special issue of the Journal of Romance Studies. In L’a...
This thesis seeks to discuss the ways in which canonical Francophone Algerian authors, writing in th...
In this thesis I examine the issues of postcolonial Algerian identity expressed in literature, and t...
This article explores representations of Algerian women in colonial, decolonizing and postcolonial c...
This project examines the question of memory and cross-cultural identities in the context of diaspor...
This research examines the ways in which women’s interwar fiction in Algeria (1962/1991) advocates w...
The Algerian War (1954-1962) was arguably the most traumatic war of decolonisation fought by Western...
Assia Djebar is among the contemporary woman writers, who mark both Algerian and French literatures...
Beyond the traditional models of femininity promoted in nationalist and Islamic discourses and endog...
Maïssa Bey, Assia Djebar and Leïla Sebbar chronicle the painful trajectory and implicit silences of ...
France and Algeria share a history of violence dating from France's invasion in 1830 through Algeria...
PhD ThesisThis thesis explores representations of narrative space and gender in 1960s French and Al...
In this paper, the author analyzes the stereotypical representations of single woman from two French...
Silence in the universe of women in the Maghreb is a common topic in the Francophone literature. The...
This chapter forms part of an inter-disciplinary collection on gender studies, discourses and identi...
This article was a commissioned piece for a special issue of the Journal of Romance Studies. In L’a...
This thesis seeks to discuss the ways in which canonical Francophone Algerian authors, writing in th...
In this thesis I examine the issues of postcolonial Algerian identity expressed in literature, and t...
This article explores representations of Algerian women in colonial, decolonizing and postcolonial c...
This project examines the question of memory and cross-cultural identities in the context of diaspor...
This research examines the ways in which women’s interwar fiction in Algeria (1962/1991) advocates w...
The Algerian War (1954-1962) was arguably the most traumatic war of decolonisation fought by Western...
Assia Djebar is among the contemporary woman writers, who mark both Algerian and French literatures...
Beyond the traditional models of femininity promoted in nationalist and Islamic discourses and endog...
Maïssa Bey, Assia Djebar and Leïla Sebbar chronicle the painful trajectory and implicit silences of ...
France and Algeria share a history of violence dating from France's invasion in 1830 through Algeria...
PhD ThesisThis thesis explores representations of narrative space and gender in 1960s French and Al...
In this paper, the author analyzes the stereotypical representations of single woman from two French...
Silence in the universe of women in the Maghreb is a common topic in the Francophone literature. The...
This chapter forms part of an inter-disciplinary collection on gender studies, discourses and identi...
This article was a commissioned piece for a special issue of the Journal of Romance Studies. In L’a...