Echoes of “dead” colonialism: The voices and materiality of a (post)colonial Algerian newspaper

IF 1.8 2区 文学 Q1 ANTHROPOLOGY
Stephanie V. Love
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

Through the concept of the echo, this article examines how postcolonial Algerians discursively locate and orient themselves in relation to the materiality of “dead” colonialism, which I broadly define as the physical presence of objects, voices, and sensual qualities (accompanied by aesthetic, value, and moral judgments) that Algerians see as persisting from the colonial before. I argue that an echo in discourse hinges on a tripartite dialogic structure: the dynamic interplay of past voices/signs, present listeners, and the material surfaces that reflect these voices/signs with delay, distortion, and varied intensity. Through the narratives of three directors of three different iterations of a local newspaper in Oran, Algeria, I examine how past voices and sounds reverberate across the threshold of the colonial and postcolonial divide and create sociopolitical and interpersonal effects that often challenge the notion that colonialism is “dead and gone.” This article advances scholarship on language materiality by positing that the material world is more than just the setting in which material speech and social action occur; rather, the material world shapes how language is heard and stances are taken in concrete ways. I conclude that echoes are central to how people tell stories about their past that matter in the present.

“死亡”殖民主义的回声:一份(后)殖民主义阿尔及利亚报纸的声音和物质性
通过回声的概念,本文探讨后殖民阿尔及利亚人如何在与“死亡”殖民主义的物质性相关的话语中定位和定位自己,我将其广义地定义为阿尔及利亚人认为从殖民时期开始就一直存在的物体、声音和感官品质(伴随着审美、价值和道德判断)的物理存在。我认为,话语中的回声取决于三方对话结构:过去的声音/符号、现在的听众和反映这些声音/符号的材料表面的动态相互作用,这些声音/符号具有延迟、扭曲和不同强度。透过阿尔及利亚奥兰(Oran)一份地方报纸三种不同版本的三位导演的叙述,我检视过去的声音和声音如何在殖民和后殖民分裂的门槛上回响,并产生社会政治和人际关系的影响,这些影响经常挑战殖民主义“已逝”的观念。这篇文章通过假设物质世界不仅仅是物质言语和社会行为发生的环境,推进了语言物质性的学术研究;更确切地说,是物质世界塑造了人们如何听到语言,并以具体的方式采取立场。我的结论是,回声对于人们如何讲述他们过去的故事至关重要。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
2.40
自引率
25.00%
发文量
35
期刊介绍: The Journal of Linguistic Anthropology explores the many ways in which language shapes social life. Published with the journal"s pages are articles on the anthropological study of language, including analysis of discourse, language in society, language and cognition, and language acquisition of socialization. The Journal of Linguistic Anthropology is published semiannually.
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