HYPERLINKS FROM THE AFTERLIVES OF THE ALGERIAN REVOLUTION
Page 1: Tadween Publishing Tadween Publishing http://bit.ly/19Z9qh4 Arab Studies Institute http://bit.ly/sSJavr Arab Studies Journal http://bit.ly/gvACqm Jadaliyya http://bit.ly/c9jO4e FAMA http://bit.ly/1dZtCDN Quilting Point http://bit.ly/1hpXc58 Middle East Studies Program http://bit.ly/GCLARl Tadween’s Editors Network http://bit.ly/15Qe8wu TEN http://bit.ly/1hpXlFQ JADMAG http://bit.ly/1bEduqp Page 2: Table of Contents Introduction to the Roundtable: The Afterlives of the Algerian Revolution http://bit.ly/1enKIgJ Still Standing: Algeria’s Future Past http://bit.ly/1mR7L9v Impossible Opposition: The Magic of the One-Party Regime http://bit.ly/1jNkLIy Reimagining the Belle Epoque: Remembering Nation-Building in an Algiers Neighborhood http://bit.ly/1i0VNn5 “Give us Back our Oil”: Claims for Justice in Light of Algeria’s Colonial Past http://bit.ly/OV9nAb 1962 as Event and Metaphor in Women’s Oral Histories in Algeria http://bit.ly/1mR7GSY Testing Diversity, Researching the Invisible: The Jew, the Israelite, and the Margins of Algerian National Identity (in France) http://bit.ly/1olJXWD Page 3: Introduction to the Roundtable: The Afterlives of the Algerian Revolution Muriam Haleh Davis Étienne Balibar wrote http://bit.ly/1mjyVW3 Mohamed Harbi show http://bit.ly/1pXQVEL widespread discontent http://bit.ly/1hHAdFe Malika Rahal http://bit.ly/1jNkLIy Ed McAllister http://bit.ly/1i0VNn5 Thomas Serres http://bit.ly/OV9nAb Natalya Vince http://bit.ly/1mR7GSY Samuel Everett http://bit.ly/1olJXWD James McDougall http://bit.ly/1mR7L9v Fanon writes http://bit.ly/1oS1KXt Page 6: Impossible Opposition: The Magic of the One-Party Regime Malika Rahal In his memoir http://amzn.to/1mpxMeF |
Rabah Bitat http://bit.ly/1jkNLul Mostefa Ben Boulaïd http://bit.ly/1m1yuvQ Didouche Mourad http://bit.ly/Q6d4DA Mohammed Boudiaf http://bit.ly/1kWto44 Krim Belkacem http://bit.ly/1hU7A6d Larbi Ben M’Hidi http://bit.ly/1m1yCLS Henri Alleg’s quote http://amzn.to/1mpxMeF Henri Desroche http://bit.ly/1iSJ08K Page 13: “Give Us Back Our Oil”: Claims for Justice in Light of Algeria’s Colonial Past Thomas Serres Liars, robbers! Give us back our oil! http://bit.ly/1cpn8BK threatened while campaigning http://bit.ly/QhFJ8Z Islamic Salvation Front http://bit.ly/NWszvO civilized Berber versus the savage Arab http://amzn.to/OW7F18 relies on the health care systems of other countries http://bit.ly/1hHAdFe Luiz Martinez http://bit.ly/1mvNYLH released a statement http://bit.ly/1i0UHaT Page 16: 1962 as Event and Metaphor in Women’s Oral Histories in Algeria Natalya Vince www.patrickaltes.com http://bit.ly/1hndgIV Page 19: Testing Diversity, Researching the Invisible: The Jew, the Israelite, and the Margins of Algerian National Identity (In France) Samuel Everett study of Algerian Islamic reformism http://bit.ly/P3vK5L state-tribe variable http://bit.ly/1o2C1yD organized one such pilgrimage http://bit.ly/1pzbRiq Glasser http://bit.ly/1jwMXT8 Bouzar-Kasbaji http://bit.ly/1gDTIkc Roth http://bit.ly/1gDTMQI Page 21: Unpacking Knowledge Production and Consumption Neha Vora recent cancellation of a conference http://bit.ly/GCKJ2a Page 22: Unpacking Knowledge Production and Consumption Neha Vora In the conclusion to my book http://amzn.to/18X4LPC Page 30: Writing Histories of the Arabian Peninsula, or How to Narrate the Past of a (Non)Place John M. Willis Sa‘at al-Tahrir Daqqat http://bit.ly/GYRtF9 |