Liberating Women, Algeria, and the World: Women Writing from the Margins of the Media

  • Mo, Sophia S. (PI)

Project: Research project

Project Details

Description

This dissertation is a transnational feminist intellectual history of Algeria's war for liberation (1954-1962) and its first post-independence regime (1962-1965). It explores how female journalists writing in Arabic and French for Algerian nationalist publications wrote women into a global history of anticolonialism. Through close readings of these periodicals, it argues that female journalists' writings were a space of cultural diplomacy in which they maneuvered their social, political, and cultural positions strategically to navigate patriarchal norms. Not only did they represent Algeria as a leader of the global coalition of revolutionary movements self-identifying as part of the 'Third World,' they also represented the liberation of Third World women—portrayed as the protectors of a cultural authenticity uncontaminated by colonialism—as a necessary step in national edification. Cultural authenticity was, as such, a malleable concept that female nationalist journalists helped to shape and used as a unifying force in the context of global anticolonialism.
StatusActive
Effective start/end date1/1/22 → …

ASJC Scopus Subject Areas

  • Communication
  • Arts and Humanities(all)

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