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E-grāmata: Berber Government: The Kabyle Polity in Pre-colonial Algeria

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(LSE Middle East Centre)
  • Formāts: 352 pages
  • Izdošanas datums: 19-Aug-2014
  • Izdevniecība: I.B. Tauris
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780857736895
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  • Formāts: 352 pages
  • Izdošanas datums: 19-Aug-2014
  • Izdevniecība: I.B. Tauris
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780857736895
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The Berber identity movement in North Africa was pioneered by the Kabyles of Algeria. But a preoccupation with identity and language has obscured the fact that Kabyle dissidence has been rooted in democratic aspirations inspired by the political traditions of Kabylia itself, a mountainous region in northern Algeria. The political organisation of pre-colonial Kabylia, from which these traditions originate, was well-described by nineteenth-century French ethnographers. But their inability to explain it led to a trend amongst later theorists of Berber society, such as Ernest Gellner and Pierre Bourdieu, to dismiss Kabylia's political institutions, notably the jemaa (assembly or council), and to reduce Berber politics to a function of social structure and shared religion. In Berber Government, Hugh Roberts explores the remarkable logics of Kabyle political organisation and the unusual degree of autonomy it enjoyed in relation to both kinship divisions and the religious field. Combining political anthropology and political and social history in an interdisciplinary analysis, this book further offers a pioneering account of the history of Kabylia during the Ottoman period and establishes a radically new way to understand the complex place of the Kabyles in Algerian politics.He instead explores the political structures and processes of the Kabyles, examining the organisation of the Kabyle polity and its intricate frameworks of law, political representation and self-government. Additionally, in a pioneering account of Kabylia's relations with the Ottoman Regency, he provides the first in-depth historical explanation of the genesis of the Kabyle polity as this existed at the moment of the French conquest of the region in 1857. In thus grounding the explanation of Kabyle political organisation in a resolutely historical analysis spanning the Ottoman era, Berber Government offers a radical alternative to previous paradigms and lays the foundation of new way of understanding the complex place and role of the Kabyles in Algerian political life from the pre-colonial era to the present day.

Papildus informācija

A radically new way of understanding North African political history from a world-renowned expert on the area.
Preface ix
A Note on Transliteration xv
List of Illustrations
xvii
List of Maps
xix
List of Tables
xxi
1 Considering Kabylia
1(26)
Greater Kabylia
1(3)
The Kabyles and the other Algerian Berbers
4(4)
Pre-colonial Kabylia and the academy: I. The unresolved
8(6)
controversy and its revival Pre-colonial Kabylia and the academy: II. Towards a
14(6)
clarification of the debate The two perspectives
20(7)
2 Economy and Forms of Settlement
27(40)
Leqbayel and Igawawen
27(5)
The economy of Kabylia
32(11)
The 'arsh in Kabylia
43(6)
Thaddarth and tufiq
49(7)
The Igawawen thaddarth
56(11)
3 Kabyle Law
67(24)
The qawanin
67(2)
Qanun, 'urf and Shari'a
69(5)
The code of honour and the code of law
74(5)
Antagonism in society
79(12)
4 The Kabyle Polity
91(52)
The thijemmu'a of Kabylia
91(9)
The temman
100(5)
The sfuf
105(8)
The sfuf and the 'arsh
113(10)
The saff systems
123(14)
The vindication of Masqueray
137(6)
5 Pre-colonial Kabylia and the Regency: Religion and Political Development, 1509--1639
143(22)
Introduction
143(3)
Ibn Khaldun and the Kabyles
146(2)
The Ottoman revolution
148(2)
The Ottoman Regency and the nature of Kabyle opposition
150(8)
The second coming of maraboutism in Kabylia
158(7)
6 The Rise and Fall of the Lords of Koukou
165(46)
The 'kingdom' of Koukou: the enigma
165(9)
The Ath l-Qadi and the foundation of Koukou
174(15)
Vassals and the temptation of disloyalty
189(4)
Ottoman policy between the Kabyles and the Ojaq
193(7)
Ottoman policy and the end of Koukou
200(6)
Koukou denned
206(5)
7 The Reconstitution of Greater Kabylia after 1640
211(72)
The origins of an originality
211(10)
The Igawawen and the exheredation of the Kabyle woman
221(7)
The imrabdhen and the reordering of Kabylia
228(18)
The Iboukhtouchen succession and the Ottoman penetration of Kabylia
246(15)
The Ottoman dispensation and the supersession of the Iboukhtouchen
261(9)
The assemblies of the Igawawen and their purposes
270(13)
8 Transcending Kabylia: The Constitutional Tradition and and the Exceptional Tradition
283(6)
Appendix 289(4)
Glossary 293(6)
Bibliography 299(14)
Index 313
Hugh Roberts is the Edward Keller Professor of North African and Middle Eastern History, Emeritus, at Tufts University and a Visiting Professor in the Middle East Centre at the London School of Economics and Political Science. He is also the author of The Battlefield: Algeria 1988-2002 (2017).