Natalya Vince
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Embodying the nation
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This chapter explores how the collective identity of the newly-independent nation was (re)imagined through women under Presidents Ahmed Ben Bella (1962-65) and Houari Boumediene (1965-78), though examining official speeches, nationality law, discourses about marriage and naming, the creation of the Union Nationale des Femmes Algériennes (National Union of Algerian Women, UNFA) and the selection of women to acts as ‘ambassadors’ for Algeria on the world stage. Challenging familiar visions of 1960s and 1970s Algeria as locked in a struggle between Arabo-Islamic ‘tradition’ and Socialist ‘modernity’, the chapter argues that a puritanical revolutionary fervour could fuse religious and cultural conservatism with the desire to build a socialist state, thus ‘making safe’ women’s entry into the public sphere. As a counterpoint to the obsession with women in official speeches, this chapter concludes with an exploration of how interviewees resisted ‘embodying the nation’ by insisting that they were gender-neutral citizens.

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Our fighting sisters

Nation, memory and gender in Algeria, 1954–2012

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