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Colonial Algeria and the Politics of Citizenship

This book explores citizenship politics in colonial Algeria, which became a key battlefield for struggles over participation of the body politic and the reach of universal promise in 1789. In examining these struggles, Avner Ofrath shows how colonialism dissolved the political community as a frame of participation and negotiation, first in the colonies and ultimately in the metropole.

 

Revealing the racialization of citizenship from the late 19th century onwards, this book shows how lawmakers under the Third French Republic construed colonial subjugation around rigid ethnic-religious criteria in order to protect settler privileges and exclude Algerian Muslims. Portraying Islam as oppressive and unmodern, the exclusion and othering of Muslims led to a concept of citizenship that was deeply hostile to religious difference.

 

Despite this, Colonial Algeria and the Politics of Citizenship shows how Algeria witnessed some of the most powerful contestations of racialized citizenship seen in a colony. From a successful Jewish campaign for full political rights in the 1860s, to Muslims' demand for reform in the 1930s, Algerians insisted on Maghribi languages, religions and history as indispensable dimensions of political life. Tracing intellectual and political networks throughout the Maghrib, the Mashriq, and across the Mediterranean, Avner Ofrath weaves Algeria into a global history of citizenship in the age of empire.

Colonial Algeria and the Politics of Citizenship

  • Avner Ofrath

    A study of citizenship in colonial Algeria that explores the ways in which colonialism dissolved agency of the political community in both the colonies and metropole of the French Empire.
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  • Book Details

    Imprint: Bloomsbury Academic
    Publication Date: 23-02-2023
    Format: Hardback | 234 x 156mm | 208 pages
  • About the Author

    Avner Ofrath is Lecturer in Modern History at the University of Bremen, Germany. He is working on a major project on the coming of Judeo-Arabic political writing. He received his PhD from the University of Oxford, UK, in 2018.

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