Are the People Backward? Algerian Symbolic Analysts and the Culture of the Masses

This article studies representations of the Algerian population promoted by francophone intellectuals in a context of longstanding crisis and uncertainty. Borrowing the category of symbolic analysts from Robert Reich, it looks at the way in which novelists, scholars and journalists try to make sense...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Thomas Serres, Tristan Leperlier
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Center for Near and Middle Eastern Studies 2017-01-01
Series:Middle East : Topics & Arguments
Subjects:
Online Access:http://meta-journal.net/article/view/5131
Description
Summary:This article studies representations of the Algerian population promoted by francophone intellectuals in a context of longstanding crisis and uncertainty. Borrowing the category of symbolic analysts from Robert Reich, it looks at the way in which novelists, scholars and journalists try to make sense of a critical situation by diagnosing the culture of the Algerian population as deviant or backward. Aiming to encourage social and political reform, these actors try to understand the characteristics of their "people", often by pointing to their so-called pre-modern or passive behaviors. This article analyzes two aspects of this activity: first, attempts to determine who is responsible for the ongoing crisis, and second, the reproduction of cultural prejudices in a context of increased transnationalization. Moreover, it argues that one can interpret the political and intellectual commitments of these analysts by drawing on the triad concept of "Naming, Blaming, Claiming", which as been used to study the publicization of disputes.
ISSN:2196-629X