Description

Book Synopsis
Recovers the lost history of colonial Algeria's communist movement -- .

Trade Review

‘Neville Alexander and Henri Alleg would be pleased and proud to read this superbly researched, carefully documented, absolutely fair-minded and accurate account. It is well structured, with a useful list of abbreviations, tables and maps. If there is an archive Professor Drew has not consulted, a surviving participant whom she did not interview, a relevant book or article and memoir she did not consult, I am unaware of it.’
David L. Schalk, Science and society Vol. 80, No. 3, July 2016

‘Drew has told the story of communist political action in Algeria in great detail, with attention to numerous individuals. At times, the number of names in play becomes overwhelming and the description of congress after congress seems excessive. But the tale is worth telling, and this kind of careful narrative is an essential building block for any analysis of the range of possibilities that opened and shut during the years of struggle over what kind of polity in what kind of wider political configuration ? whether communist or imperial, national or federal – Algeria could be. In the end, Drew doesn’t explicitly answer the question of what the relationship of communism and nationalism actually was. But that question has no single answer, and she has given us a rich narrative of a struggle whose complexity is well worth pondering.’
Frederick Cooper, Department of History, New York University, Canadian Journal Of African Studies/La Revue Canadienne Des Études Africaines, July 2016

‘We Are No Longer in France is a concisely written, empirically dense, and thought-provoking case study which illuminates the profound impact of the conflict between nationalism and internationalism on global anti-colonial communism in the twentieth century. […] Its language is precise, its citations are meticulous, and its bibliography is extensive, ensuring its place as a key reference work that will be useful to a wide range of scholars, as well as to advanced undergraduate and graduate students of colonial, imperial, and European political history.’
Michelle Rose Mann, Washington State University, H-France, Vol. 18 (2018)

'In sum, Allison Drew [...] present important studies on a whole constellation of subjects: the impossibility of colonial reform, the rhythms of politics, the blindness or clear-sightedness of social actors, the experiences of activists and colonial subjects, the construction of political spaces and the only partially successful encounter between leftists and Algerian society.’
Notes de lecture - Le Mouvement social

-- .

Table of Contents

Introduction – Imagining socialism and communism in Algeria
1. The land and its conquest
2. Grappling for a communist foothold
3. ‘The mountain “was going communist”’: peasant struggles on the Mitidja
4. ‘This land is not for sale’: communists, nationalists and the popular front
5. The nation in formation: communists and nationalists during the Second World War
6. For an Algerian national front: unity and division in the liberation struggle
7. Sparking an insurrection: pressure from the countryside
8. ‘Our people will overcome’: to the cities and the prisons
9. ‘We need a country that talks’: imagining the future Algeria
Conclusion: Algerian communists and the new Algeria
Bibliography
Index

We are no longer in France

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    A Hardback by Allison Drew

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      View other formats and editions of We are no longer in France by Allison Drew

      Publisher: Manchester University Press
      Publication Date: 9/30/2014 12:00:00 AM
      ISBN13: 9780719090240, 978-0719090240
      ISBN10: 0719090245

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Recovers the lost history of colonial Algeria's communist movement -- .

      Trade Review

      ‘Neville Alexander and Henri Alleg would be pleased and proud to read this superbly researched, carefully documented, absolutely fair-minded and accurate account. It is well structured, with a useful list of abbreviations, tables and maps. If there is an archive Professor Drew has not consulted, a surviving participant whom she did not interview, a relevant book or article and memoir she did not consult, I am unaware of it.’
      David L. Schalk, Science and society Vol. 80, No. 3, July 2016

      ‘Drew has told the story of communist political action in Algeria in great detail, with attention to numerous individuals. At times, the number of names in play becomes overwhelming and the description of congress after congress seems excessive. But the tale is worth telling, and this kind of careful narrative is an essential building block for any analysis of the range of possibilities that opened and shut during the years of struggle over what kind of polity in what kind of wider political configuration ? whether communist or imperial, national or federal – Algeria could be. In the end, Drew doesn’t explicitly answer the question of what the relationship of communism and nationalism actually was. But that question has no single answer, and she has given us a rich narrative of a struggle whose complexity is well worth pondering.’
      Frederick Cooper, Department of History, New York University, Canadian Journal Of African Studies/La Revue Canadienne Des Études Africaines, July 2016

      ‘We Are No Longer in France is a concisely written, empirically dense, and thought-provoking case study which illuminates the profound impact of the conflict between nationalism and internationalism on global anti-colonial communism in the twentieth century. […] Its language is precise, its citations are meticulous, and its bibliography is extensive, ensuring its place as a key reference work that will be useful to a wide range of scholars, as well as to advanced undergraduate and graduate students of colonial, imperial, and European political history.’
      Michelle Rose Mann, Washington State University, H-France, Vol. 18 (2018)

      'In sum, Allison Drew [...] present important studies on a whole constellation of subjects: the impossibility of colonial reform, the rhythms of politics, the blindness or clear-sightedness of social actors, the experiences of activists and colonial subjects, the construction of political spaces and the only partially successful encounter between leftists and Algerian society.’
      Notes de lecture - Le Mouvement social

      -- .

      Table of Contents

      Introduction – Imagining socialism and communism in Algeria
      1. The land and its conquest
      2. Grappling for a communist foothold
      3. ‘The mountain “was going communist”’: peasant struggles on the Mitidja
      4. ‘This land is not for sale’: communists, nationalists and the popular front
      5. The nation in formation: communists and nationalists during the Second World War
      6. For an Algerian national front: unity and division in the liberation struggle
      7. Sparking an insurrection: pressure from the countryside
      8. ‘Our people will overcome’: to the cities and the prisons
      9. ‘We need a country that talks’: imagining the future Algeria
      Conclusion: Algerian communists and the new Algeria
      Bibliography
      Index

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