Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/1893/30997
Appears in Collections:Literature and Languages Journal Articles
Peer Review Status: Refereed
Title: The Rue D'Isly, Algiers, 26 March 1962: The Contested Memorialization of a Massacre
Author(s): Barclay, Fiona
Contact Email: fiona.barclay@stir.ac.uk
Keywords: Algeria
commemoration
massacre
massacre
pieds-noirs
Issue Date: 1-Dec-2021
Date Deposited: 16-Apr-2020
Citation: Barclay F (2021) The Rue D'Isly, Algiers, 26 March 1962: The Contested Memorialization of a Massacre. French Politics, Culture and Society, 39 (3), pp. 1-25. https://doi.org/10.3167/fpcs.2021.390301
Abstract: This article examines the memorial discourses surrounding the massacre that occurred on 26 March 1962 when, in the week following the Franco-FLN ceasefire, French soldiers opened fire on a demonstration of unarmed European settler civilians, killing 46 and wounding 150. Largely unknown amongst wider French society, references to the massacre have become a staple of the pied-noir activist discourse of victimhood, often advanced as evidence that they had no choice but to leave Algeria in 1962. The article draws on French and Algerian press articles, as well as online, print, and film publications produced by the repatriated European population. It reveals how settlers' narratives first dehistoricized the massacre and then invested it with a significance that drew on multidirectional memories borrowed from a range of sometimes jarring international contexts. The analysis accounts for why the massacre contributed to the repatriated settler community's sense of identity and relationship to the wider French nation. On Monday 26 March 1962, almost a week after the Evian Accords had put an official end to the Algerian War of Independence, soldiers of the French army opened fire on unarmed civilians from the European population demonstrating on the rue d'Isly in the center of Algiers. Twelve minutes of gunfire left forty-six people dead, and two hundred wounded. Remembered and commemorated by the European settler community, the majority of whom were repatriated to France later that year, the massacre has been otherwise largely forgotten,
DOI Link: 10.3167/fpcs.2021.390301
Rights: This item has been embargoed for a period. During the embargo please use the Request a Copy feature at the foot of the Repository record to request a copy directly from the author. You can only request a copy if you wish to use this work for your own research or private study. Accepted for publication in French Politics, Culture and Society published by Berghahn. https://doi.org/10.3167/fpcs.2021.390301 This version is made publicly accessible in the repository under a CC BY-NC-ND 4.0 user license agreement

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