Description
From the leading British commentator on France, this is an absorbing, vivid, and monumental account of the tortured relationship between France and its ex-colonies, from the first days of Empire to the ongoing eruptions of violence in the streets of Paris and its suburbs
About the Author
ANDREW HUSSEY is Director of the Centre for Post-Colonial Studies in the School of Advanced Study, University of London. He is a regular contributor to the Guardian and the New Statesman, and the writer/presenter of several BBC documentaries on French food and art. He is the author of The Game of War: The Life and Death of Guy Debord (2001), and Paris: The Secret History (2006). He was awarded an OBE in the 2011 New Years Honours list for services to cultural relations between the United Kingdom and France. He lives in Paris.
Reviews
There is some terrific and chilling reporting [here] and Hussey is at his best when on the streets... Provocative... an important new book * Economist *
Compelling... Hussey makes a strong case that France's contemporary malaise can only be understood in the light of [its] tragic history... Fascinating and hugely readable -- Matthew Campbell * Sunday Times *
Vivid, arresting, and striking... Hussey is a talented writer, and knows his subject... Nuanced and persuasive * Guardian *
Rigorous, perceptive, clear-eyed, colourful and powerful, Andrew Hussey's The French Intifada is an important, and highly readable, book which should be read by anyone interested in France today, and in the broader question of Islam in Europe in the 21st century -- Jason Burke
Disturbing and provocative -- Rupert Edis * Daily Telegraph**** *
A refreshing account [that] blends colourful narrative history with lively reportage and analysis... [This is] a good introduction to the most sensitive issues of race, religion, citizenship and history that grip modern France -- Tony Barber * Financial Times *
[It] mixes lively street reportage with the history of two brutal centuries in France's former Maghreb territories... This is strong stuff -- Charles Bremner * New Statesman *
A vivid illumination of the ongoing, painful and perhaps insoluble French dilemma * Kirkus *
Hussey stresses the dire economic circumstances that prevail and the toxic mix of big ambitions, poor education and refusal to believe in hard graft -- Michael Burleigh * The Times *
[This book] deserves our admiration -- Nick Fraser * Observer *
Hussey is an engaging guide... writing with authority and humour about everything from Zinedine Zidane to architecture... A fascinating and enjoyable read * Irish Examiner *
Pithy... [with] effective potted histories of Algeria, Tunisia and Morocco -- Farah Nayeri * Independent *
Extremely readable... a page-turner... Highly recommended * Morning Star *
Urgent and brilliant... Superb writing on the complexities of race, religion and immigration that situates this in the legacies of Empire and colonialism -- Mark Perryman * Counterfire *
Lively and well paced -- Natasha Lerner * TLS *
Indispensable -- Patrick Marnham * 'Books of the Year' Spectator *
Excellence recurs in The French Intifada, where a lust for travel and understanding of the past produces a book of disturbing power. [Hussey] brings a depth of knowledge to a study of the legacy of French colonial sojourns in Morocco, Tunisia and Algeria, making his travelogue read like a literary history-cum-dark documentary thriller -- Tom Adair 'Travel book of the year' * Scotsman *
Fascinating and hugely readable -- Matthew Campbell 'Pick of the Paperbacks' * Sunday Times *
Andrew Hussey knows France and its colonial history better than most French people. He tells the ugly truth... He offers no solutions, but his willingness to delve into other belief systems is a worth-while, sobering journey. French officials should read Hussey's book -- Lara Marlowe * Irish Times *
Fascinating -- Charles Moore * Spectator *
Book Information
ISBN 9781847082596
Author OBE Andrew Hussey
Format Paperback
Page Count 464
Imprint Granta Books
Publisher Granta Books
Weight(grams) 310g
Dimensions(mm) 205mm * 135mm * 30mm