France, Story of a Childhood

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Pub Date May 24 2016 | Archive Date Jun 03 2016

Description

An intimate, heartbreaking autobiographical novel of an Algerian Muslim family’s exile from home and unwelcoming reception in France

This moving tale of imprisonment and escape, persecution and loss, is narrated by the daughter of an alleged Harki, an Algerian soldier who fought for the French during the Algerian War for Independence. It was the fate of such men to be twice exiled, first in their homeland after the war, and later in France, where fleeing Harki families sought refuge but instead faced contempt, discrimination, and exclusion. Zahia Rahmani blends reality and imagination in her writing, offering a fictionalized version of her own family's struggle. Lara Vergnaud's beautiful translation from the French perfectly captures the voices and emotions of Rahmani's childhood in a foreign land.

While the author delves deeply into the past, she also indicts present-day France and Algeria. From the unique perspective of the daughter of an accused Harki, she examines France's complex and controversial history with its former colony and offers new insight into the French civil riots of 2005. She makes a stirring plea for understanding between generations and cultures, and especially for an end to the destructive practice of condemning children for their fathers' actions and beliefs.

Zahia Rahmani, an author and art historian at the National Institute for Art History in France, was born in Algeria during the Algerian War of Independence. Her father was an accused Harki, who was imprisoned as a traitor by the Algerians after the war. He escaped prison and fled with his family to France in 1967. Rahmani now lives in Paris and Oise, France. Lara Vergnaud is a French-English literary translator. She lives in Washington, D.C.
An intimate, heartbreaking autobiographical novel of an Algerian Muslim family’s exile from home and unwelcoming reception in France

This moving tale of imprisonment and escape, persecution and loss...

Advance Praise

"Gracefully, elliptically, France, Story of a Childhood presents Rahmani’s anxious emergence from the imaginative terrain of youth. With its appeal to humanity in the face of the politics of exclusion, this beautiful translation could not be more timely."—Mark Sussman, Hunter College


"It is the local that yields the global: Rahmani’s elegantly sparse & fiercely elegant writing (auto-bio-fiction braided with essayistic memoir, i.e. writing rightly impatient with singular “genre” constrictions) even while detailing the specificity of a Harki’s child upbringing in France after the family’s flight from Algeria, points to a present in which we all are exiles, as borders crumple or are reinforced—but have to be crossed. She tells us how one can learn to act and think as citizens of a global world in which old certainties no longer hold. This exilic existence, which now defines us 'could be a blessing if ever it was deliberately brought to light,' writes Rahmani, because 'it demands an unimpeachable quest for truth.'"—Pierre Joris, autor of Barzak: Poems 2000-2012 and of Poems for the Millennium vol. 4: The University of California Book of North African Literature

"Gracefully, elliptically, France, Story of a Childhood presents Rahmani’s anxious emergence from the imaginative terrain of youth. With its appeal to humanity in the face of the politics of...


Available Editions

EDITION Paperback
ISBN 9780300212105
PRICE $16.00 (USD)

Average rating from 2 members