top of page
Search
  • Writer's pictureAmina Ijaz

BOOK 4752

Ecologies of Imperialism in Algeria Hardcover – Oct. 1 2023

by Brock Cutler (Author)


TO BUY THE BOOK PLEASE USE THE FOLLOWING LINK: https://amzn.to/3nuruCn


SUMMARY OF THE BOOK: Between 1865 and 1872 widespread death and disease unfolded amid the most severe ecological disaster in modern North African history: a plague of locusts destroyed crops during a disastrous drought that left many Algerians landless and starving. The famine induced migration that concentrated vulnerable people in unsanitary camps where typhus and cholera ran rampant. Before the rains returned and harvests normalized, some 800,000 Algerians had died.

In Ecologies of Imperialism in Algeria Brock Cutler explores how repeated eco-social divisions across an expansive ecosystem produced modern imperialism in nineteenth-century Algeria. Massive ecological crisis--cultural as well as natural--cleaved communities from their homes, individuals from those communities, and society from its typical ecological relations. At the same time, the relentless, albeit slow-moving crisis of ongoing settler colonialism and extractive imperial capitalism cleaved Algeria to France in a new way. Eco-social divisions became apparent in performances of imperial power: officials along the Algerian-Tunisian border compulsively repeated narratives of "transgression" that over decades made the division real; a case of poisoned bread tied settlers in Algiers to Paris; Morocco-Algeria border violence exposed the exceptional nature of imperial sovereignty; a case of vagabondage in Oran evoked colonial gender binaries. In each case, factors in the broader ecosystem were implicated in performances of social division, separating political entities from each other, human from nature, rational from irrational, and women from men. Although these performances take place in nineteenth-century Maghrib, the process they describe goes beyond those spatial and temporal limits--across the field of modern imperialism to the present day.

1 view0 comments

Recent Posts

See All

Comments


Post: Blog2_Post
bottom of page