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Title
Categorical Divides and the Berber Identity Movement: A Discursive Approach to Identity Formation in Algeria and France |
Full text
http://hdl.handle.net/1887/19282 |
Date
2012 |
Author(s)
Morath, A. |
Contributor(s)
Ragazzi, Dr. F.P.S.M.; Zwart, Dr. F. de |
Abstract
In 2001, the killing of a young Kabyle student in Algeria sparked Berber anti-Arab protests in Algeria and France, marking decades of intermittent conflict positing Berber identity against the Arab-Islamic policies of the Algerian state. Explanations for a growing Berber movement and the resulting conflict point to historical categorical divisions of "Berber" and "Arab" in colonialism and cultural groups. This thesis challenges the historical consistency of these explanations and examines how identity is constructed; it asks how this categorization of "Berbers" and "Arabs" has mobilized a Berber identity movement. Instead of linking this movement to a legacy of "Berber" against "Arab," this thesis aims to show that the Berber identity movement as understood today is a relatively recent phenomenon. The following analysis develops two main arguments to support this claim: First, a historical discourse analysis of four periods shows that the category "Berber" has served different functions in different contexts. Second, the analysis develops a genealogy of "Berber" to present an alternative understanding for how categorization has shaped Berber identity, arguing that this movement is better understood as a product of interacting national discourses based on exclusive concepts of membership. These arguments are developed using insights from securitization theory to model identity formation, conceptualizing "Berber" as a term used with a purpose that produces a context dependent effect. |
Subject(s)
Algeria; France; discourse; Berber movement |
Language
en_US |
Type of publication
Master thesis |
Repository
Leiden - University of Leiden
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Added to C-A: 2012-07-16;13:44:57 |
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