Making Peace with Your Enemy: Algerian, French, and South African Ex-Combatants

Author:   Lætitia Bucaille ,  Ethan Rundell ,  Ethan Rundell
Publisher:   University of Pennsylvania Press
ISBN:  

9780812251104


Pages:   376
Publication Date:   14 June 2019
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
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Making Peace with Your Enemy: Algerian, French, and South African Ex-Combatants


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Overview

Reconciliation between political antagonists who went to war against each other is not a natural process. Hostility toward an enemy only slowly abates and the political resolution of a conflict is not necessarily followed by the immediate pacification of society and reconciliation among individuals. Under what conditions can a combatant be brought to understand the motivations of his enemies, consider them as equals, and develop a new relationship, going so far as to even forgive them? By comparing the experiences of veterans of the South African and Franco-Algerian conflicts, Laetitia Bucaille seeks to answer this question. She begins by putting the postconflict and postcolonial order that characterizes South Africa, France, and Algeria into perspective, examining how each country provided symbolic and material rewards to the veterans and how past conflict continues to shape the present. Exploring the narratives of ex-combatants, Bucaille also fosters an understanding of their intimate experiences as well as their emotions of pride, loss, and guilt. In its comparative analysis of South Africa and Algeria, Making Peace with Your Enemy reveals a paradox. In Algeria, the rhetoric of the regime is characterized by resentment toward colonizing France but relations between individuals Reconciliationare warm. However, in South Africa, democratization was based on official reconciliation but distance and wariness between whites and blacks prevail. Despite these differences, Bucaille argues, South African, Algerian, and French ex-adversaries face a similar challenge: how to extricate oneself from colonial domination and the violence of war in order to build relationships based on trust.

Full Product Details

Author:   Lætitia Bucaille ,  Ethan Rundell ,  Ethan Rundell
Publisher:   University of Pennsylvania Press
Imprint:   University of Pennsylvania Press
ISBN:  

9780812251104


ISBN 10:   0812251105
Pages:   376
Publication Date:   14 June 2019
Audience:   College/higher education ,  Tertiary & Higher Education
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us.

Table of Contents

Introduction PART I. THE AFTERMATH OF CONFLICT: (RE)FORGING THE POLITICAL ORDER Chapter 1. South Africa: Sparing the Losers Chapter 2. Algeria: The Victory over Colonialism Chapter 3. France and the Algerian War: Forgetting or Endless Confrontation? PART II. EX-COMBATANTS AND THE NATION Chapter 4. South African Ex-Combatants: The Constraints of Reconciliation and the Law of the Market Chapter 5. The Ex-Combatants of the FLN: An Eternally Privileged Revolutionary Family Chapter 6. The Ex-Combatants of the OAS: From Exile to Overintegration PART III. WAR NARRATIVES AND IMAGINARIES OF VIOLENCE Chapter 7. Collective Discourse Chapter 8. Perpetrating Violence Chapter 9. The Intimate Ordeal of Torture PART IV. THE DEMANDS OF JUSTICE AND RECOGNITION Chapter 10. Offering Forgiveness/Demanding Apology Chapter 11. Extricating Oneself from Domination Conclusion Notes Acknowledgments

Reviews

This important comparative study reveals new sightlines to students of all societies where histories of empire and ongoing questions of racism and racialized difference still matter. Ethan Rundell's skillful translation captures Laetitia Bucaille's incisive interweaving of, on the one hand, compelling oral testimony from veterans of two bitter, bloody, as well as 'untraditional' wars and, on the other, a deep engagement with historical and sociological scholarship. The results are at once accessible and enlightening. -Todd Shepard, Johns Hopkins University Making Peace with Your Enemy is a breakthrough book. Laetitia Bucaille focuses on how former combatants experienced the cessation of hostilities and the ways in which they represent their past. She builds incisively on the narratives-and silences-of torturers and tortured, hunters and hunted, and the intertwined official and personal remembering and forgetting on all sides in France, Algeria, and South Africa. Fresh and compelling, this book is a must-read. -Dale F. Eickelman, Dartmouth College


Making Peace with Your Enemy is a breakthrough book. Laetitia Bucaille focuses on how former combatants experienced the cessation of hostilities and the ways in which they represent their past. She builds incisively on the narratives-and silences-of torturers and tortured, hunters and hunted, and the intertwined official and personal remembering and forgetting on all sides in France, Algeria, and South Africa. Fresh and compelling, this book is a must-read. -Dale F. Eickelman, Dartmouth College This important comparative study reveals new sightlines to students of all societies where histories of empire and ongoing questions of racism and racialized difference still matter. Ethan Rundell's skillful translation captures Laetitia Bucaille's incisive interweaving of, on the one hand, compelling oral testimony from veterans of two bitter, bloody, as well as 'untraditional' wars and, on the other, a deep engagement with historical and sociological scholarship. The results are at once accessible and enlightening. -Todd Shepard, Johns Hopkins University


Making Peace with Your Enemy is a breakthrough book. Laetitia Bucaille focuses on how former combatants experienced the cessation of hostilities and the ways in which they represent their past. She builds incisively on the narratives--and silences--of torturers and tortured, hunters and hunted, and the intertwined official and personal remembering and forgetting on all sides in France, Algeria, and South Africa. Fresh and compelling, this book is a must-read.--Dale F. Eickelman, Dartmouth College This important comparative study reveals new sightlines to students of all societies where histories of empire and ongoing questions of racism and racialized difference still matter. Ethan Rundell's skillful translation captures Laetitia Bucaille's incisive interweaving of, on the one hand, compelling oral testimony from veterans of two bitter, bloody, as well as 'untraditional' wars and, on the other, a deep engagement with historical and sociological scholarship. The results are at once accessible and enlightening.--Todd Shepard, Johns Hopkins University


Author Information

Laetitia Bucaille is Professor of Sociology at Langues'O, Institut national des langues et civilisations orientales (INALCO,), Universite Sorbonne Paris Cite and a researcher at the Centre d'etudes en sciences sociales des mondes americains, africain et asiatique (CESSMA).

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