1 / 17

French views of the Maghreb vs. sub-Saharan Africa

French views of the Maghreb vs. sub-Saharan Africa. The construction of race in France’s African colonies.

vila
Download Presentation

French views of the Maghreb vs. sub-Saharan Africa

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. French views of the Maghreb vs. sub-Saharan Africa The construction of race in France’s African colonies

  2. French colonial policies were based on racist exclusion & racial theories as we have seen before..Gobineau: 3 main races (white, yellow, black); weaknesses & qualities, but white people placed on top of racial hierarchy. Indigenous muscians, Morocco

  3. Non-Europeans were less civilised • Colonial apologists usedevolutionary racial (pseudo)science to place the world’s peoples according to European values (of civilisations). • French colonial bureaucrats’ role: • To educate, • To instruct, & • To bring advancement & enlightenment to the “colonial children”.

  4. France never governed Africa under a single colonial apparatus. • Many French writers distinguished between the Maghreb & sub-Saharan Africa, frequently labelled Afrique noire (Black Africa). • France ignored the longstanding economic, cultural, & political links between the Maghreb & sub-Saharan Africa. Many in France & Europe preferred to regard the Sahara not as the highway & meeting place, but rather as a racialised boundary dividing black Africa from the Mediterranean world.

  5. Algeria: attempted to sever France’s largest & most important colony from Africa & bind it to France through the racialisation of colonial boundaries. • Algeria was not “black” but Mediterranean, a kind of lesser-white region more closely tied to Europe than to Africa. The oasis town of El-Oved in the Sahara, Algeria.

  6. In many ways, this view & policy succeeded in achieving the intellectual separation of the Maghreb from Africa in French thinking. • Colonial scholars largely dismissed the continued connections across the Sahara, & Africa, & administrators encouraged attempts to ‘seal’ the Maghreb (meaning “white”) from l’Afrique noire.

  7. Islam • Colonial administrators & academics saw: Islam south of the Sahara as Islam noir(Black Islam). (Islam: emphasis on equality of all Muslims, regardless of ethnic origin, in the eyes of God & the faith.) Islam noirreflected a division unrecognisable to African Muslims of the time.

  8. Christopher Harrison • France and Islam in West Africa(1988), • French policy clearly differentiated Muslim practices & beliefs in the Maghreb from those of French West Africa & French Equatorial Africa • sub-Saharan Islam differed from Islam in the Middle East & North Africa because of racial difference.

  9. Religion • Colonial scholars & the administrators could not imagine religious practice outside of an organised scheme. • They ranked civilisations & races = Europeans (especially French) at the top of civilisational achievement. • Arabs: distinctly less advanced society, though still considered as “white.” • Africans (sub- Saharans) located at bottom of this scale & were portrayed Africans as primitive • French view : Arab Muslims had a cultural predisposition towards fanaticism &anti-European hostility.

  10. Colonial administrators created artificial, racialised distinctions within Islam • Algeria- 2 major population groups, speaking Arabic & various Berber languages. • Berbers & Arabs(late arrivals): lived without much conflict for centuries- trading, inter-marrying, & often cooperating despite differences in language, customs, & culture. • French Empire changed this • * footnotes next 3 slides

  11. Pause for footnotes: Algeria’s population now consists almost entirely of Arabs • Arabs in Algeria are chiefly of Berber derivation, particularly in the Kabilia & Aurès areas & in the Sahara oases, or mixtures of Berbers with invaders from earlier periods. • The Berbers, who resemble the Mediterranean sub-race of Southern Europe, are descendants of the original inhabitants of Algeria & are divided into many subgroups. • They account for 99% of the population.

  12. The Berbers (continued) • Kabyles (Kaba'il), mostly farmers, live in the compact mountainous section in the northern part of the country between Algiers & Constantine. • Chaouia (Shawiyyah) live in the Aurès Mountains of the northeast. • Mzab, or Mozabites, include sedentary date growers in the Ued Mzab oases. • Desert groups: Tuareg, Tuat, & Wargla (Ouargla).

  13. There were Jews in Algeria before & during the arrival of the French • ½ descended from converted Berbers, • & the remainder were mainly descendants of Spanish Jews. • After independence, about 70,000 Jews emigrated to France & 10,000 to Israel. • Almost all the rest left Algeria during the next seven years <100 Jews remained as of 1998, & virtually all synagogues were converted to mosques.

  14. Colonial scholars thought : Arabs invaded Algeria, usurpers who brought Islam to the region & imposed it, by force, on Berbers. • Thus somehow the Berbers retained a collective cultural empathy for France & for European civilisation.

  15. Kabyle Myth • Berbers gave the impression in colonial texts as similar to Europeans, as open to the French civilising mission, as noble & ultimately less rebellious to French colonialism. • Patricia Lorcin calls it the Kabyle Myth: it completely diminished both manifest* & frequent demonstrations of Berber opposition to the extension of French colonial rule and the similarities & connections between Arabs and Berbers. • * obvious

  16. Consequences for both colonial govt. postcolonial Algeria • French policy did in fact favour Berbers. • French reinforced ideas of difference between Arabs & Berbers. • Myths set up the 2 groups in opposition to each other: • AlgerianArabs- fanatical, obstinate, unruly, & inclined to violence & disruption. • Berbers - noble, honourable , & hospitable; less Islamic & more civilised

  17. * Berber opposition to colonial rule fed into myths about Algerian cultural identities. • Many writers created an artificial separation between Arab & Berber Muslims in Algeria. • In contemporary Algeria & among Algerian populations in France: Arab & Berber now mean something in terms of social, cultural, & political difference. • * French colonial mythmaking & racialisation of identity worsened, & mostly created, tensions between ethnic communities in Algeria.

More Related