In Forgotten Voices, Ali Abdullatif Ahmida employs archival research, oral interviews, and comparative analysis to rethink the history of colonial and nationalist categories and analyses of modern Libya. He explores the ambiguities, failures, and silences manufactured by current colonial and nationalist scholarships, and he presents the voices of the Libyan people as they have confronted contradictions of modernity, the nation state, and alienation the contemporary nation. Forgotten Voices, analyzes the context of power and human agency to capture the complex social history of Libyan peasants, tribesmen, women, slaves and victims of fascist concentraion camps in their diverse strategies for survival.
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أخبار - كتب جديدة - عروض