纪念阿尔及利亚战争结束六十周年

IF 0.3 4区 历史学 Q2 HISTORY Modern & Contemporary France Pub Date : 2023-01-02 DOI:10.1080/09639489.2022.2160699
Mildred Mortimer
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引用次数: 0

摘要

2022年7月5日是阿尔及利亚独立60周年纪念日。阿尔及利亚的解放斗争,法国称之为阿尔及利亚战争,阿尔及利亚,民族解放战争,始于1954年,当时民族解放阵线(FLN)游击队袭击了全国各地的军事设施、警察哨所、通讯设施和公用事业。这场战争在城市和农村进行,随着1962年3月19日签署《埃维昂协定》而结束。三个月后,阿尔及利亚正式独立。经过132年的政治统治,法国殖民主义结束了,阿尔及利亚独立的新时代开始了。作为非洲第一次成功的反殖民主义战争,以及60年后影响法阿关系的历史性斗争,阿尔及利亚从法国殖民统治下争取独立的成功斗争继续吸引着阿尔及利亚、法国以及两国边界以外的历史学家、作家、学生和公众的关注。本期《现代与当代法国》建议在阿尔及利亚解放战争结束60年后的这一特殊时刻审视这场战争及其后果。作者采用历史、政治、社会学和文学等多种分析视角,认为冲突幸存者及其后代以及来自不同地理、文化和时间空间的社会科学家和作家所写的文本为战争提供了独特的视角,使复杂的历史事件更加清晰。在这方面,所有写阿尔及利亚战争的人——一场为被殖民者争取民族解放的战争,一场为殖民者维持现状的斗争——都认识到,那场暴力冲突给个人和两国的集体心理都留下了创伤。正如历史学家本杰明·斯托拉(Benjamin Stora)提醒我们的那样,双方都没有真正接受20世纪非殖民化过程中最痛苦的冲突之一。他呼吁结束困扰两国的健忘症,他写道:“法国和阿尔及利亚的公民不考虑他们在公民身上的历史,在公民身上的历史,在公民身上的历史,在公民身上的历史,在公民身上的历史,在公民身上的历史,在公民身上的历史,在公民身上的历史。”在一项新的研究中,伙伴关系的发展与冲突是相互的(Stora 1991: 320)。事实上,包括斯托拉在内的许多作家和历史学家都用未愈合的伤口这一形象来描述战争对法国和阿尔及利亚个人和社会的影响。重访一场六十多年前结束的战争是一种启发性的经历。60年的时间跨度为士兵和平民,前战斗人员和目击者提供了独特的历史视角,其中一些是成年人,另一些是成年人
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The sixtieth anniversary of the end of the Algerian War
5 July 2022 marked the sixtieth anniversary of Algerian independence. Algeria’s liberation struggle, a war that France calls the Algerian War and Algeria, the war of national liberation, began in 1954 when guerrillas of the FLN (National Liberation Front) attacked military installations, police posts, communications facilities, and public utilities in various parts of the country. Fought in the cities and in the countryside, the war ended with the signing of the Evian Accords on 19 March 1962. Algeria officially became independent three months later. After 132 years of political domination, French colonialism came to an end and the new era of Algerian independence dawned. As the first successful anticolonial war in Africa and a historic struggle that influences French-Algerian relations sixty years later, Algeria’s successful fight for independence from French colonial rule continues to capture the attention of historians, writers, students, and the general public in Algeria, France, and beyond both their borders. This issue of Modern & Contemporary France proposes to examine the war and its aftermath in this particular moment, sixty years after it had ended in Algeria’s liberation. Adopting multiple analytical lenses—historical, political, sociological, and literary—the contributors posit that texts written by survivors of the conflict and their descendants as well as social scientists and writers from varying geographic, cultural and temporal spaces offer unique perspectives on the war, bringing greater clarity to the complex historical events. In this regard, all who write about the Algerian War—a war of national liberation for the colonised, a struggle to maintain the status quo for the coloniser—recognize that the trauma of that violent conflict scarred individuals and the collective psyche of both nations. As historian Benjamin Stora reminds us, neither side has really come to terms with one of the most painful conflicts of decolonisation of the twentieth century. Calling for an end to the amnesia that has plagued both nations, he writes: ‘Français et Algériens doivent regarder en face leur propre histoire intérieure, balayer mythes et chimères, démêler droits et souvenirs. On ne peut partager l’avenir en niant le passé commun conflictuel’ (Stora 1991: 320). Indeed, many writers and historians, including Stora, use the image of an unhealed wound to characterize the effects of the war on individuals and the community in France and Algeria. Revisiting a war that ended more than sixty years ago proves to be a revelatory experience. A six-decade time span grants unique historical perspectives as soldiers and civilians, former combatants and witnesses—some who were adults, and others who were
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