Maïssa Bey: Madame Lafrance

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the novel Madame Lafrance covers the 132-year history of Algeria under French colonial rule. In 25 pictures (chapters), the author draws the main stages from the landing of the French Armada on June 14, 1830 to the resistance led by Emir Abdel Kader to the bloody war of liberation (1954 - 1962), the rampage of the terrorist organization OAS and the proclamation of the Independence, which went hand in hand with the flight of almost all Algerian French. Nevertheless, the author does not convey the subject as a historian, but as a writer who knows how to deal with words in a playful way. Through history guides us the child, custodian of memory, is an observer of the situation and at the same time a cautious commentator who, over the decades, has taken up more and more of a position.

Translated from French by Christine Belakhdar

Maïssa Bey

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prose | 1st edition 2017 | Hardcover with dust jacket | 180 pages

21,90

Maïssa Bey: Madame Lafrance

ISBN 978-3-96202-011-8 Genres , ,

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Reviews and press:

Dresden latest news:

The French-writing Algerian author, born in 1950, spent two years researching newspaper articles, diaries and letters by contemporary authors. In 2008 "Pierre Sang Papier ou cendre" was published, for which she promptly received the Grand Prix du roman francophone SILA. Christine Belakhdar has now translated the book into German under the title "Madame Lafrance". She came to the Villa Augustin in Dresden for the book premiere together with the author, moderated by Torsten König from the Institute for Romance Studies at the TU. more

Signatures:

Maïssa Bey also tells her story with a view to today and the question that will continue to occupy us in 2018, where the anger of the Arab world towards “the West” comes from. Much of this can be found in colonial history. The nationalism that Europeans brought to Africa and Asia, the anti-Semitism they brought with them, the racism, the hubris, the arrogance of power. The subjugation of countries, tribes and established structures for purely economic and geostrategic interests. more

afarab.blogspot.com:

Madame LaFrance has arrived. She brings strong men with her who will drain the swamps for her, build roads and bridges for her, lay railway lines for her, till fields for her and only her and bring in rich harvests that the motherland urgently needs. (...) more