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Joined by a fellow hot girl historian and survivor of honours Modern History modules, Mayu Sadler and Claire unpack the various roles Algerian women played in the 1954-62 Algerian War of Independence (only recognized as a war by the French in 1999... yikes!) and the shapeshifting identities of Algerian women related to veiling, unveiling, and guerilla warfare, Frantz Fanon, and the struggle for these women's histories to be written and showcased from the archives. Other topics include the Student Association elections, My Year of Rest and Relaxation, snow in Africa, and female hysteria!
Also follow @mayuscrans on Instagram after you follow @hotgirlhistories
TW: episode includes mention of rape, torture, and violence under colonial rule
Bibliography and further reading:
Shiera S. el-Malik, ‘Intellectual work ‘In the world’: Women’s writing and anti-Colonial thought in Africa, Irish studies in International Affairs, 24, 2013, pp.101-120
Jacqueline Couti, ‘Am I My Sister’s Keeper? The Politics of Propriety and the Fight for Equality in the Works of French Antillean Women Writers, 1920s-40s’, in Felix Germain, Silyane Larcher, Black French Women and the Struggle for Equality, 1848-2016’, (Nebraska, 2018), pp.129-144
Jennifer Anne Biottin, ‘”Are you trying to play a White Woman?” La Mere Patrie and the Female Body in French West Africa’, Signs, 40:4 (Summer 2015), pp. 841-864.
Joined by a fellow hot girl historian and survivor of honours Modern History modules, Mayu Sadler and Claire unpack the various roles Algerian women played in the 1954-62 Algerian War of Independence (only recognized as a war by the French in 1999... yikes!) and the shapeshifting identities of Algerian women related to veiling, unveiling, and guerilla warfare, Frantz Fanon, and the struggle for these women's histories to be written and showcased from the archives. Other topics include the Student Association elections, My Year of Rest and Relaxation, snow in Africa, and female hysteria!
Also follow @mayuscrans on Instagram after you follow @hotgirlhistories
TW: episode includes mention of rape, torture, and violence under colonial rule
Bibliography and further reading:
Shiera S. el-Malik, ‘Intellectual work ‘In the world’: Women’s writing and anti-Colonial thought in Africa, Irish studies in International Affairs, 24, 2013, pp.101-120
Jacqueline Couti, ‘Am I My Sister’s Keeper? The Politics of Propriety and the Fight for Equality in the Works of French Antillean Women Writers, 1920s-40s’, in Felix Germain, Silyane Larcher, Black French Women and the Struggle for Equality, 1848-2016’, (Nebraska, 2018), pp.129-144
Jennifer Anne Biottin, ‘”Are you trying to play a White Woman?” La Mere Patrie and the Female Body in French West Africa’, Signs, 40:4 (Summer 2015), pp. 841-864.