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This chapter looks at the dynamics and politics of names and naming in the region. It also looks at the foundational historical narratives that created the concept of the Maghreb. Even though colonial authors invented several names to designate the region, two names prevailed at the height of colonial rule in the 1930s: North Africa and the Maghreb. The historiography of the region also isolated it in such a way as to make it distinct from the west part of Africa and the east part that by 1916 became known, in the context of British rule, as the Middle East. But the process of creating the Middle East and more specifically Egypt as separate started with the expedition of Napoleon, whereas the invention of the Maghreb was undertaken intensively after 1870 with the founding of a historiographic state that was politically expansionist and culturally hegemonic. The chapter also examines how West Africa was isolated from the area of the Maghreb.
Under French colonial rule, the region of the Maghreb emerged as distinct from two other geographical entities that, too, are colonial inventions: the Middle East and Africa. In this book, Abdelmajid Hannoum demonstrates how the invention of the Maghreb started long before the conquest of Algiers and lasted until the time of independence, and beyond, to our present. Through an interdisciplinary study of French colonial modernity, Hannoum examines how colonialism made extensive use of translations of Greek, Roman, and Arabic texts and harnessed high technologies of power to reconfigure the region and invent it. In the process, he analyzes a variety of forms of colonial knowledge including historiography, anthropology, cartography, literary work, archaeology, linguistics, and racial theories. He shows how local engagement with colonial politics and its modes of knowledge were instrumental in the modern making of the region, including in its postcolonial era, as a single unit divorced from Africa and from the Middle East.
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