ECU Libraries Catalog

Colonial migrants and racism : Algerians in France, 1900-62 / Neil MacMaster.

Author/creator MacMaster, Neil, 1945-
Format Book and Print
Publication InfoNew York : St. Martin's Press, 1997.
Descriptionvii, 307 pages : illustrations, maps ; 23 cm
Supplemental Content Table of contents
Supplemental Content Book review (H-Net)
Supplemental Content Publisher description
Supplemental Content The John G. Hartman Memorial Library Fund Home Page
Supplemental Content Full-text
Subject(s)
Contents List of Maps, Tables and Figures -- Acknowledgements -- Introduction (starting p. 1) -- 1 Colonial Destruction of Algerian Society (starting p. 22) -- 2 Kabylia and the Migrant Tradition (starting p. 34) -- 3 Emigration: The Early Years, 1905-18 (starting p. 50) -- 4 Departure and Employment (starting p. 67) -- 5 Life in the Enclave (starting p. 84) -- 6 Islam and the Village (starting p. 103) -- 7 Working-class Racism (starting p. 118) -- 8 Elite Racism and the Colonial Lobby (starting p. 134) -- 9 Policing and Surveillance in France (starting p. 153) -- 10 Colonial Crisis and Emigration, 1930-54 (starting p. 172) -- 11 Emigration and the Algerian War, 1954-62 (starting p. 189) -- Conclusion (starting p. 207) -- Appendix (starting p. 223) -- Notes (starting p. 226) -- Bibliography (starting p. 280) -- Index (starting p. 298)
Review "This is the first comprehensive study in English of the earliest and largest 'third-world' migration into Europe. It explores the interrelationship between the colonial destruction of Algerian society and the creation of a reserve of cheap manpower that was tapped by the metropolitan economy and armed forces. The Berber and Arab peasants faced great hardship in the factories and slums of interwar France and responded by organizing social networks based on village and kin structures. The French working class showed hostility to the 'alien' presence but organized racism was largely generated by colonial elites. Attempts were made to police migrants and to segregate them from Communist, nationalist and trade union influences that might be transmitted back to North Africa and undermine the colonial order. Current anti-Arab racism is deeply rooted in this prewar movement to isolate Algerian migrant workers in France by presenting them as barbarian 'invaders', criminals and vectors of dangerous microbes."--BOOK JACKET.
Bibliography noteIncludes bibliographical references (pages 280-297) and index.
Genre/formHistory.
LCCN 96032471
ISBN0333644662 (cloth)
ISBN9780333644669 (cloth)
ISBN0333687000 (pbk.)
ISBN9780333687000 (pbk.)
ISBN0312165013 (cloth)
ISBN9780312165017 (cloth)

Available Items

Library Location Call Number Status Item Actions
Joyner General Stacks DC34.5.A4 M33 1997 ✔ Available Place Hold