Walls of Algiers: Narratives of the City through Text and Image, Book

<i>Walls of Algiers: Narratives of the City through Text and Image</i>, Book
Walls of Algiers: Narratives of the City through Text and Image, Book
Item# 978-0-295-98868-9
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Product Description

Walls of Algiers: Narratives of the City through Text and Image
Edited by Zeynep Çelik, Julia Clancy-Smith, and Frances Terpak

Published by The Getty Research Institute, Los Angeles, and The University of Washington Press, Seattle and London

288 pages, 7 x 10 inches
89 color illus.
ISBN 978-0-295-98868-9
Paperback

Walls of Algiers examines the historical processes that transformed Ottoman Algiers, the “Bulwark of Islam,” first into “Alger la blanche,” the colonial urban showpiece, and then, after the outbreak of revolution in 1954, into the countermodel of France's global empire. In this volume, the city of Algiers serves as a case study for the analysis of the proactive and reactive social, political, technical, and artistic forces that generate a city's form. Visual sources — prints, photographs, paintings, architectural drawings, urban designs, and film — are treated as primary evidence that complements and even challenges textual documents. The contributors' wide-ranging but intersecting essays span the disciplines of art history, social and cultural history, urban studies, and film history. Walls of Algiers presents a multifaceted look at the social use of urban space in a North African city. Its contributors' innovative methodologies allow important insights into often overlooked aspects of life in a city whose name even today conjures up enchantment as well as incomprehensible violence. Contributors include Eric Breitbart, Omar Carlier, Zeynep Çelik, Julia Clancy-Smith, Isabelle Grangaud, Patricia M. E. Lorcin, and Frances Terpak.

"Walls of Algiers is cultural history at its best, a compelling interdisciplinary collection of essays on Algiers by leading scholars, analyzing the city's Ottoman and Colonial urban spaces, architectures, streets, and city planning as well as its imagery in art, film, and photography. Providing sparkling new accounts from a diversity of post-colonial perspectives, this timely and important book is indispensable for the study of empires and their legacies." — Deborah Cherry, University of Amsterdam

"In this richly documented volume, the people, images, and places of the city of Algiers come alive. A group of outstanding scholars have been brought together to consider Ottoman, French colonial, and post-independence Algerian history through photography, popular culture, visual studies, religion, and language. Their scholarship reveals how the inhabitants actually live in Algiers, how social relations were and are conducted, what are the symbols of political authority and the boundaries of religious space, and how the city, then and now, is delineated through memory and identity." -Susan Slyomovics, editor, The Living Medina in the Maghrib: The Walled Arab City in Literature, Architecture, and History