posted on 2017-05-18, 08:25authored byJo McCormack
This thesis examines memory and its transmission through a case study of the Algerian
war of national independence in terminale history classes in France. It argues that while
these classes may, in relative terms, be an important vector of "memory" for the young,
in absolute terms very little information is transmitted. Indeed, as currently taught, the
history of the Algerian war is increasingly partial, fragmentary and selective. This is
clearly shown through a study of both written and oral sources, including particularly
textbooks and extensive interviews with pupils, teachers and historians.
Various theories of memory are referred to in order to explain this position, as are a
number of practical considerations. It is argued that, at the national/collective level, the
past still to a large extent determines the present desire to live together. History classes
continue to play an important role in this process (despite significant changes in social
formations). More specifically, the complex relationship between individual and
collective constructions of the past is examined by discussing the experiences of both
teachers and pupils. Particular attention is given here to the way in which a collective
"French" memory is transmitted to children of immigrant origin. The way the war is
taught serves both to reflect and to determine its wider social commemoration, and
history lessons thus contribute to the generational transformation of this memory that
may now be observed.
The thesis concludes that it is more accurate to talk now of an almost total French
"ignorance" of the Algerian war, rather than of the psychological "repression"
conventionally associated with the conflict. Moreover, the continued existence of
competing accounts of the war on the part of mutually hostile interest groups serves
further to limit its discussion, as does the weakness of other vectors of memory. The
stakes of the Algerian "memory-war'? are still high, as selective comparisons with the
Vichy experience reveal. It seems ultimately that the Algerian war is examined
sufficiently to avoid the emergence of significant resentment from any quarter, but not
adequately to permit any genuine questioning of what remains a little known period of
the French past.
This work is made available according to the conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International (CC BY-NC-ND 4.0) licence. Full details of this licence are available at: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/
Publication date
2000
Notes
A Doctoral Thesis. Submitted in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the award of Doctor of Philosophy of Loughborough University.