Introduction: A Decade of Postcolonial Crisis: Fracture, Rupture
and Apartheid (2005-2015) / Nicolas Bancel, Pascal Blanchard,
and Dominic Thomas
Part I. Colonial Fracture / 2005
1.1 The Emergence of the Colonial
1. The Republican Origins of the Colonial Fracture / Nicolas Bancel
and Pascal Blanchard
2. When a (War) Memory Hides another (Colonial) / Benjamin
Stora
3. A Difficult History: A Brief History of the Colonial and the
Postcolonial Situation / Nicolas Bancel
4. Reducing the Republic's Native to the Body /
Nacira Guénif-Souilamas
5. Colonization and Immigration: "Blind Spots" in the History
Classroom / Sandrine Lemaire
6. Memory Wars: A Study of the Intersection between History and
Media / Pascal Blanchard and Isabelle Veyrat-Masson
1.2 The Return of the Colonial
7. The Enemy Within: The Construction of the "Arab" in the Media /
Thomas Deltombe and Mathieu Rigouste
8. Islam and the Republic: A Long, Uneasy History /
Anna Bozzo
9. The Republic, Colonization. And Beyond /
Michel Wieviorka
10. Colonial Natives and Indigents: from the Colonial "Civilizing
Mission" to Humanitarian Action / Rony Brauman
11. The Banlieues as a Colonial Theater, or the Colonial Fracture
in Disadvantaged Neighborhoods / Didier Lapeyronnie
12. The Pitfalls of Colonial Memory / Nicolas Bancel and Pascal
Blanchard
13. Overseas France: A Vestige of the Republican Colonial Utopia? /
Françoise Vergès
Part II. Postcolonial Ruptures / 2010
2.1 Debating the Colonial Legacy
14. Rethinking Politics in the French Overseas Departments /
Jacky Dahomay
15. "Race," Ethnicization, and Discrimination: Is History Repeating
Itself or Is this a Postcolonial Peculiarity? / Patrick Simon
16. From the Empire to the Republic: "French Islam" / Valérie
Amiraux
17. Immigration: From Métèques to Foreigners / Yvan Gastaut
18. Inequality Between Humans: From "Race Wars" to "Cultural
Hierarchy / Pascal Blanchard
2.2 Postcolonial and Critical Gazes
19. The Postcolonial Challenges of Teaching History: Between
History and Memory / Benoît Falaize
20. Postcolonial Studies in French Academia / Catherine
Coquery-Vidrovitch
21. From Slavery to the Postcolonial / Patrick Weil
22. The Great Strip Show: Feminism, Nationalism, and the Burqa in
France / Elsa Dorlin
23. From the Red Peril to the Green Peril: The New Enemy Within /
Renaud Dély
Part III. Apartheid and the War of Identities in France / 2015
3.1 The end of the "French model"?
24. From the Dakar Speech to the Taubira Affair / Ariane Chebel
d'Appollonia
25. Could Islamophobia be the Start of a New Identy-Based Bond in
France? / Rachid Benzine
26. The Black Question and the Exhibit B Controversy / Alain
Mabanckou and Dominic Thomas
27. Cultural Orientalization or Political Occidentalism? / Nicolas
Lebourg
28. Faces of the National Front (1972-2015) / Sylvain Crépon
29. Infiltration of Liquid Populism / Raphaël Liogier
3.2 Rejet de l'autre, radicalisation identitaire, impensé
colonial
30. Nanoracism and the Force of Emptiness / Achille Mbembe
31. Antiracism: A Failed Fight or the End of an Era ? /
Emmanuel Debono
32. Closing Borders Against Fear: Europe's Response to the 2015
"Migration Crisis" / Claire Rodier
33. Toward a Real History of French Colonialism / Alain Ruscio
34. Is a Colonial History Museum Politically Impossible? / Nicolas
Bancel and Pascal Blanchard
35. After Charlie: A New Era or Unfinished Business?/ Alec
Hargreaves
Bibliography
Index
Nicolas Bancel is Professor at the University of Lausanne,
Switzerland, and codirector of the ACHAC Research Group.
Pascal Blanchard is a historian and researcher at the Laboratoire
Communication et Politique (Paris, France, CNRS), codirector of the
ACHAC Research Group, and a documentary filmmaker.
Dominic Thomas is Madeleine L. Letessier Professor and Chair of the
Department of French and Francophone Studies at UCLA.
Alexis Pernsteiner is a freelance editor and translator:
www.pernsteinertranslations.com. Her translations include Colonial
Culture in France since the Revolution (IUP).
"Highly recommended."—Choice
"This book brings together a vast array of scholars around the
question of colonial fracture. Ignoring this past has only served
to further exacerbate societal tensions. As the contributors
underscore, facing this past head on will assist France in the
process of understanding society today."—Altermondes
"The contributors to this book raise the following questions: Is
there such a thing as a colonial facture? Can France overcome this
identity crisis? What we have is a society that remains uncertain
when it comes to its future, precisely because it has been ubale to
reckon with its past."—Zurban
"An intelligent, rich, carefully constructed, and thoughtful work
that will prove all the more important at this time in history when
the debate on colonialism occupies center stage, often at the
service of political ends. This book is first and foremost an
attempt to rethink the ways in which the French colonial project
became integral to 19th century Republican discourse and the shape
of today's reality."—Télérama
![]() |
Ask a Question About this Product More... |
![]() |