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An Empire of Facts: Colonial Power, Cultural Knowledge, and Islam in Algeria, 1870–1914 (Critical Perspectives on Empire)

An Empire of Facts: Colonial Power, Cultural Knowledge, and Islam in Algeria, 1870–1914 (Critical Perspectives on Empire)

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George R. Trumbull IV
Cambridge University Press
Edition: Illustrated, 11/19/2009
EAN 9780521734349, ISBN10: 0521734347

Paperback, 328 pages, 22.6 x 15 x 2 cm
Language: English
Originally published in English

An Empire of Facts presents a fascinating account of the formation of French conceptions of Islam in France's largest and most important colony. During the period from 1870 to 1914, travelers, bureaucrats, scholars, and writers formed influential and long-lasting misconceptions about Islam that determined the imperial cultural politics of Algeria and its interactions with republican France. Narratives of Islamic mysticism, rituals, gender relations, and sensational crimes brought unfamiliar cultural forms and practices to popular attention in France, but also constructed Algerian Muslims as objects for colonial intervention. Personal lives and interactions between Algerian and French men and women inflected these texts, determining their style, content, and consequences. Drawing on sources in Arabic and French, this book places such personal moments at the heart of the production of colonial knowledge, emphasizing the indeterminacy of ethnography, and its political context in the unfolding of France's empire and its relations with Muslim North Africa.

Introduction
'Sa Vie Etrange Autour de Nous'
1. Writing like a state
the question of anthropology and the colonial origins of politicized ethnography
2. The lies that empire tells itself when times are easy
3. 'Au Coin des Rues Diderot et Moïse'
the ethnography of the esoteric and the politics of religious sociability
4. 'Les Mauvais Génies Dans Tous les Contes de Fées'
the ethnography of popular religion and the fashioning of Algerian primitivism
5. 'Have You Need of a Model, He Will Furnish One on Command'
the gendering of morality and the production of difference in colonial ethnography
6. Discipline and publish
militant ethnography and crimes against culture
Conclusion.