Algeria, France: How memory works?

University of Oxford   |   28–29 May 2018

European Studies Centre (St Antony’s College) & Maison Française d’Oxford

PRESENTATION

The workshop will shed new light on the individual and collective processes of the memorialisation of the Algerian War of Independence (1954–62), in contemporary Algeria and France.

Building on the conference I convened last year with James McDougall and Natalya Vince (The Algerian War of Independence: Global and Local Histories), the workshop draws the attention to the aftermath of the war, and more specifically to the memories and the representations of the conflict and beyond, moving towards a wider comprehension of the Algerian-French (un)relation. Far from the authoritarian synthesis so often presented as the ‘collective memory’, the workshop aims to root memories in a precisely located framework and then looks at how they are worked through in individual and local life-histories and representations.

Aiming to avoid the trap of the endless ‘memory wars’ that still infect Algerian and French public debate, the workshop shifts focus from what memory (and identity) is, to how it works. In so doing, particular attention is devoted to the local/global scales: this enables a detailed analysis of a multi-layered memory framework in contrast to the nation-state’s one-dimensional pattern, displaying the possible coexistence—not hierarchically ordered—of the local and translocal, national and transnational, and reveals the connections between them. The workshop will eventually show the potential of a truly interdisciplinary approach, connecting cutting edge research in the fields of memory studies and global history.

This workshop brings together scholars from various disciplines and different countries. Speakers and participants include a mix of senior scholars, graduates and early career researchers. The event will explore issues that are central to the historiography of Algeria and France but which also have a striking contemporary resonance. Debates in (post)colonial Europe and the Mediterranean over multiculturalism, memories and identities have immediate echoes in the social memories and representations of the Algerian War of Independence.

THIS IS A FREE EVENT OPEN TO ALL

To secure your place, please email: european.studies@sant.ox.ac.uk

Originally posted on France-Algeria Conference 2018

Conflits dans le Sahara : des dynamiques locales occultées par le mirage du djihad global

Depuis 2013, la France a engagé une véritable guerre contre le terrorisme en Afrique, en l’occurrence dans une partie de la bande sahélo-saharienne qui va du Tchad jusqu’à la Mauritanie. La menace est présentée comme globale face à des groupes djihadistes affiliés ou en lien avec les deux principales franchises mondiales, à savoir Al-Qaïda et l’État islamique (Daech).

Malgré l’ensablement du conflit, le principe d’un engagement militaire n’est donc pas contesté et fait l’objet d’un relatif consensus au sein de l’opinion publique et de la classe politique en France. Le contraste est saisissant. Lors de la première crise du Golfe en 1991, des Français étaient descendus dans la rue pour manifester contre l’intervention militaire des États-Unis au Koweït. L’Élysée avait ensuite pris officiellement position contre Washington au moment de l’invasion de l’Irak en 2003.

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Sent by Edouard Bustin

Article originally published on The Conversation