04320nam 22006371 450 991015488780332120141209124710.097807556093070755609301978178453766117845376679780857724205085772420710.5040/9780755609307(CKB)3880000000002288(EBL)3012101(SSID)ssj0001442675(PQKBManifestationID)11823061(PQKBTitleCode)TC0001442675(PQKBWorkID)11420207(PQKB)11396954(MiAaPQ)EBC3012101(OCoLC)901227555(UtOrBLW)bpp09264599(UtOrBLW)BP9780755609307BC(EXLCZ)99388000000000228820200131d2014 uy 0engurun|---uuuuatxtccrBerber government the Kabyle polity in pre-colonial Algeria /Hugh RobertsLondon ;New York :I.B. Tauris,2014.1 online resource (352 p.)Library of Middle East history ;14Description based upon print version of record.9781845112516 1845112512 9781322639956 1322639957 Includes bibliographical references (pages [299]-312) and index.Chapter 1: Introduction: Considering Kabylia -- Chapter 2: Perspectives on Berber politics -- Chapter 3: The Kabyle Economy: Leqbaiel and Igawawen -- Chapter 4: Pre-Colonial Kabylia: Forms of Settlement -- Chapter 5: Kabyle Law -- Chapter 6: The Kabyle Polity -- Chapter 7: Pre-Colonial Kabylia and the Regency: Religion and Political Development, 1510-1624 -- Chapter 8: The Rise and Fall of the Lords of Koukou -- Chapter 9: The Reconstitution of Greater Kabylia after 1630."The Berber identity movement in North Africa was pioneered by the Kabyles of Algeria. But a preoccupation with identity and language has obscured the fact that Kabyle dissidence has been rooted in democratic aspirations inspired by the political traditions of Kabylia itself, a Berber-speaking region in the north of Algeria. The political organisation of pre-colonial Kabylia, from which these traditions originate, was well-described by nineteenth-century French ethnographers. But their inability to explain it led to a trend amongst later theorists of Berber society, such as Ernest Gellner and Pierre Bourdieu, to dismiss Kabylia's political institutions, notably the jema'a (assembly or council), and to reduce Berber politics to a function of social structure and shared religion. In Berber Government, Hugh Roberts, a renowned expert on North Africa, uncovers and explores the remarkable logics of Kabyle political organisation. Combining political anthropology and political and social history in an interdisciplinary analysis, Roberts challenges the excessive emphasis on kinship and religion in the study of the Maghreb. He instead explores the political structures and processes of the Kabyles, examining the organisation of the Kabyle polity and its intricate frameworks of law, political representation and self-government. Additionally, in a pioneering account of Kabylia's relations with the Ottoman Regency, he provides the first in-depth historical explanation of the genesis of the Kabyle polity as this existed at the moment of the French conquest of the region in 1857. In thus grounding the explanation of Kabyle political organisation in a resolutely historical analysis spanning the Ottoman era, Berber Government offers a radical alternative to previous paradigms and lays the foundation of new way of understanding the complex place and role of the Kabyles in Algerian political life from the pre-colonial era to the present day."--Bloomsbury publishing.BerbersAlgeriaPolitics and governmentAfrican historyBICBerbersPolitics and government.African history.965/.004933Roberts Hugh1950-657911UtOrBLWUtOrBLWBOOK9910154887803321Berber government2960393UNINA