Moral homelands: localism and the nation in Kabylia (Algeria)

<p>This thesis is a study of attitudes to regional and national identity in Kabylia, a Berber-speaking region in northeast Algeria, and among Kabyle migrants in Paris. I illustrate how Kabyles nurture a fragile balance of nationalism and regional particularism through a primarily moral notion...

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Hlavní autor: Maas, L
Další autoři: Gildea, R
Médium: Diplomová práce
Jazyk:English
Vydáno: 2014
Témata:
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author Maas, L
author2 Gildea, R
author_facet Gildea, R
Maas, L
author_sort Maas, L
collection OXFORD
description <p>This thesis is a study of attitudes to regional and national identity in Kabylia, a Berber-speaking region in northeast Algeria, and among Kabyle migrants in Paris. I illustrate how Kabyles nurture a fragile balance of nationalism and regional particularism through a primarily moral notion of local community, and extend it to an alternative vision for an Algerian nation which they believe has been debased by a corrupt state regime and Arabo-Islamic ideology since national independence. The thesis is based on two years of ethnographic fieldwork divided between two places – Paris and a large village in Kabylia – and reflects my interest in how people ‘imagine’ national community through their experience as members of smaller social groups.</p> <p>Many Kabyle activists today formulate an alternative vision of Algerian national politics as a federation of several regionally based affective communities, each maintaining internal solidarity. This echoes a tendency in French colonial writings on Kabylia, discussed in the opening chapter, to conceive of the region as an island, intensively connected yet defensive of its autonomy. As citizens of the existing Algerian state, many Kabyles contest assimilation by claiming to represent Algeria’s ‘true past’, and investing contemporary governance initiatives with its values. They represent the radical difference that this implies with metaphors of the Kabyle community as a family within ‘public’ national life, and accuse the state regime of reversing this relationship by adopting a language of coercive authority appropriate only within the family. The transmission of Kabyle values today relies heavily on music, and especially political song, which I demonstrate – beyond its role in disseminating dissident ideas – acts as a vehicle for a type of secular revealed knowledge widely seen as the purest embodiment of Kabyle morality.</p> <p>Beyond the hollow rhetoric of Western liberalism that some see in Kabyle activism, I set out to demonstrate that the particular narrative of identity that I examine, in stressing regional uniqueness at the expense of recognition from a centralized state, also reflects anomalies inherent in the concept of ‘nationalism’ itself as a compromise between the requirements of external co-operation and internal allegiance.</p>
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spelling oxford-uuid:ca46f9d7-eda1-4932-a6ea-fc2c07efe88a2022-03-27T07:06:09ZMoral homelands: localism and the nation in Kabylia (Algeria)Thesishttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_db06uuid:ca46f9d7-eda1-4932-a6ea-fc2c07efe88aMigrationHistory of AfricaIndigenous peoplesethnomusicologyEthnographic practicesAfricamusic and politicsMiddle EastSocial anthropologyEnglishOxford University Research Archive - Valet2014Maas, LGildea, RWillis, M<p>This thesis is a study of attitudes to regional and national identity in Kabylia, a Berber-speaking region in northeast Algeria, and among Kabyle migrants in Paris. I illustrate how Kabyles nurture a fragile balance of nationalism and regional particularism through a primarily moral notion of local community, and extend it to an alternative vision for an Algerian nation which they believe has been debased by a corrupt state regime and Arabo-Islamic ideology since national independence. The thesis is based on two years of ethnographic fieldwork divided between two places – Paris and a large village in Kabylia – and reflects my interest in how people ‘imagine’ national community through their experience as members of smaller social groups.</p> <p>Many Kabyle activists today formulate an alternative vision of Algerian national politics as a federation of several regionally based affective communities, each maintaining internal solidarity. This echoes a tendency in French colonial writings on Kabylia, discussed in the opening chapter, to conceive of the region as an island, intensively connected yet defensive of its autonomy. As citizens of the existing Algerian state, many Kabyles contest assimilation by claiming to represent Algeria’s ‘true past’, and investing contemporary governance initiatives with its values. They represent the radical difference that this implies with metaphors of the Kabyle community as a family within ‘public’ national life, and accuse the state regime of reversing this relationship by adopting a language of coercive authority appropriate only within the family. The transmission of Kabyle values today relies heavily on music, and especially political song, which I demonstrate – beyond its role in disseminating dissident ideas – acts as a vehicle for a type of secular revealed knowledge widely seen as the purest embodiment of Kabyle morality.</p> <p>Beyond the hollow rhetoric of Western liberalism that some see in Kabyle activism, I set out to demonstrate that the particular narrative of identity that I examine, in stressing regional uniqueness at the expense of recognition from a centralized state, also reflects anomalies inherent in the concept of ‘nationalism’ itself as a compromise between the requirements of external co-operation and internal allegiance.</p>
spellingShingle Migration
History of Africa
Indigenous peoples
ethnomusicology
Ethnographic practices
Africa
music and politics
Middle East
Social anthropology
Maas, L
Moral homelands: localism and the nation in Kabylia (Algeria)
title Moral homelands: localism and the nation in Kabylia (Algeria)
title_full Moral homelands: localism and the nation in Kabylia (Algeria)
title_fullStr Moral homelands: localism and the nation in Kabylia (Algeria)
title_full_unstemmed Moral homelands: localism and the nation in Kabylia (Algeria)
title_short Moral homelands: localism and the nation in Kabylia (Algeria)
title_sort moral homelands localism and the nation in kabylia algeria
topic Migration
History of Africa
Indigenous peoples
ethnomusicology
Ethnographic practices
Africa
music and politics
Middle East
Social anthropology
work_keys_str_mv AT maasl moralhomelandslocalismandthenationinkabyliaalgeria