Abstract
AbstractScholars of democracy from Tocqueville to Habermas have long considered the proliferation of so-called voluntary associations as a sign of a flourishing civil society and as central to the rise of democratic modernity. I contend that the Algerian theatrical and musical associations of the reformist period anticipate another kind of civic history: a history of displays of unanimism in public life. I am interested in how and why Algerians learned to produce public displays of agreement for particular audiences (including themselves) at particular historical moments. I emphasize three factors that contributed to the production of unanimity: the achievement oftawḥīdor unity in the Islamic reform movement, vernacular practices of consensus-based argumentation, and French colonial legal and surveillance mechanisms. The essay engages theories of civil society, colonialism, and performance. It draws primarily on material from the French colonial archives for the city of Constantine, Algeria.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Sociology and Political Science,History
Reference74 articles.
1. Citizens All? Citizens Some! The Making of the Citizen;Wallerstein;Comparative Studies in Society and History,2003
2. Prendre parti à Constantine : l’UDMA de 1946-1956
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