Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Dedication: Chinua Achebe Joins the Ancestors
- Stop Press/ Tribute to Kofi Awoonor 1935–2013
- Contents
- Notes on Contributors
- Editorial Article
- Articles
- “Real Africa”/“Which Africa?”: The Critique of Mimetic Realism in Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie's Short Fiction
- Writing Apartheid: Miriam Tlali's Soweto Stories
- Articulations of Home & Muslim Indentity in the Short Stories of Leila Aboulela
- Ugandan Women in Contest with Reality: Mary K. Okurutu's A Women's Voice & the Women's Future
- Snapshots of the Botswana Nation: Bessie Head's The Collector of Treasures & Other Botswana Village Tales as a National Project
- Widowhood – Institutionalized Dead Weight to Personal Identity & Dignity: A Reading of Ifeoma Okoye's The Trial & Other Stories
- Feminist Censure of Marriage in Islamic Societies: A Thematic Analysis of Alifa Rifaat's Short Stories
- Diaspora Identities in Short Fiction by Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie & Sefi Atta
- Exposition of Apartheid South African Violence & Injustice in Alex la Guma's Short Stories
- Locating a Genre: Is Zimbabwe a Short Story Country?
- Mohammed Dib's Short Stories on the Memory of Algeria
- Ama Ata Aidoo's Short Stories: Empowering the African Girl-Child
- Ama Ata Aidoo: an Interview for ALT
- Reviews
Mohammed Dib's Short Stories on the Memory of Algeria
from Articles
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 December 2013
- Frontmatter
- Dedication: Chinua Achebe Joins the Ancestors
- Stop Press/ Tribute to Kofi Awoonor 1935–2013
- Contents
- Notes on Contributors
- Editorial Article
- Articles
- “Real Africa”/“Which Africa?”: The Critique of Mimetic Realism in Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie's Short Fiction
- Writing Apartheid: Miriam Tlali's Soweto Stories
- Articulations of Home & Muslim Indentity in the Short Stories of Leila Aboulela
- Ugandan Women in Contest with Reality: Mary K. Okurutu's A Women's Voice & the Women's Future
- Snapshots of the Botswana Nation: Bessie Head's The Collector of Treasures & Other Botswana Village Tales as a National Project
- Widowhood – Institutionalized Dead Weight to Personal Identity & Dignity: A Reading of Ifeoma Okoye's The Trial & Other Stories
- Feminist Censure of Marriage in Islamic Societies: A Thematic Analysis of Alifa Rifaat's Short Stories
- Diaspora Identities in Short Fiction by Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie & Sefi Atta
- Exposition of Apartheid South African Violence & Injustice in Alex la Guma's Short Stories
- Locating a Genre: Is Zimbabwe a Short Story Country?
- Mohammed Dib's Short Stories on the Memory of Algeria
- Ama Ata Aidoo's Short Stories: Empowering the African Girl-Child
- Ama Ata Aidoo: an Interview for ALT
- Reviews
Summary
The work of the contemporary Algerian author Mohammed Dib defines the notion of colonial and postcolonial terrorism in Algeria and their impact on Algerian identity. I use the term ‘terrorism’ in this paper in keeping with Martha Hutchinson's definition that takes terrorism as ‘acts of emotionally or physically “destructive harm”‘ (1978: 18). Accordingly, I classify terrorism in Algeria as coming from two different directions: the French colonial terrorism of the 1950s and the extremist terrorism of the 1990s. Both types involve ‘acts of [physically] atrocious or psychologically shocking violence’ (19) that are destructive to Algerian identity. Dib's short stories reflect what Dominick LaCapra describes as ‘“writing trauma” [that] involves processes of acting out, working over, and to some extent working through in analysing and “giving voice” to the past’ (186). This article is a study of Dib's literary representation of the Algerian trauma through four short stories: ‘Naema- Whereabouts Unknown,’ ‘The Savage Night’, ‘The Detour’, and ‘A Game of Dice’. The paper is in three parts. Part 1 gives a historical background from the French colonization of Algeria in 1830 up to the 1990s civil war. Part 2 is an analysis of Dib's vision of French colonial terrorism and its impact on Algerian identity through ‘Naema–Whereabouts Unknown’ and ‘The Savage Night’. Part 3 examines Dib's literary perspective on extremist terrorism through ‘The Detour’ and ‘A Game of Dice’.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Writing Africa in the Short Story , pp. 135 - 147Publisher: Boydell & BrewerPrint publication year: 2013