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AuthorSadiki, Larbi
Available date2023-12-12T08:19:16Z
Publication Date2015-10-20
Publication NameJournal of North African Studies
Identifierhttp://dx.doi.org/10.1080/13629387.2015.1081455
CitationSadiki, L. (2015). Discoursing ‘democratic knowledge’& knowledge production in North Africa. The Journal of North African Studies, 20(5), 688-690.
ISSN1362-9387
URIhttps://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?partnerID=HzOxMe3b&scp=84945486398&origin=inward
URIhttp://hdl.handle.net/10576/50332
AbstractNorth Africa (interchangeably used with the term ‘Maghrib’) has historically featured as a contributor to Euro-Med cultures and civilisations. Mesopotamia, Egypt and Phoenicia all at one point in time or another mediated processes of infusion, inclusion and diffusion of ‘learning’. The flow was not one-way. The ‘travel’ of ideas left lasting inscriptions on the region's cultural map. As North Africa enters its ‘democratic’ and ‘revolutionary’ moment, it is apposite to address the question of democratic knowledge and trans-democratic exchange. This question is noted by glaring omission in most accounts of the Maghrib since the eruption of the 2011 uprisings. This moment registers continuity as much as rupture. It is a moment opportune for a break, encouraging the unshackling of the region from postcolonial histories of tutelage from without. Yet, at the same time, it renews the ethos of exchange, concomitantly unmaking North Africa as a space of ‘exile’, ‘exception’ and ‘otherness’ and remaking it as a shared space of democratising ferment, as subalterns seek renewal and self-conception through ‘democratic knowledge’.
Languageen
PublisherTaylor & Francis
SubjectMaghrib
democratic knowledge
TitleDiscoursing ‘democratic knowledge’ & knowledge production in North Africa
TypeArticle
Pagination688-690
Issue Number5
Volume Number20
ESSN1743-9345
dc.accessType Full Text


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