Jihad and its interpretations in pre-colonial Morocco
state-society relations during the French conquest of Algeria
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Author
Publication
2002 - RoutledgeCurzon, New York, New York (State)
Language
English
Word Count
51,250 words, Guess
Page Count
205 pages
Identifiers
- ISBN-100700716939
- ISBN-139780700716937
- LibraryThing6798460
- Library of Congress Control Number2002068232
- OCLC Control Number51051839
and 2 more
- Better World Books9780700716937
- Open LibraryOL3568208M
Classifications
- DDC964/.03
- LCCJC49 .B46 2002
- LCCJC49.B46 2002
Description
"This work challenges colonial and post colonial assumptions about the nature of the pre-colonial Moroccan sultanate by reassessing the political concepts that regulated the relationship between the state and its mostly tribal subjects. Colonial interpretations of the sultanate portrayed it as chronically divided into territories obedient to the state and those dissident towards it. Yet by using previously under-exploited archival sources in Morocco and Europe, the author suggests that state-society warfare was not merely dissidence, but part of a constant process of political negotiation. Key to this negotiation was the idea that a sultan's legitimacy lay in his ability to wage jihad. Detailed analysis of state and society interpretations of jihad during the critical period of the French conquest of Algeria clearly shows this process at play and its growing importance as the likelihood of European aggression increased."--BOOK JACKET.
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