Immigration and Identity in Beur Fiction

Voices From the North African Community in France

Alec G Hargreaves author

Format:Paperback

Publisher:Bloomsbury Publishing PLC

Published:1st May '97

Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

Immigration and Identity in Beur Fiction cover

Also available in hardback, 9780854966493 GBP45.00 (October, 1991)

Well over dozens of members of the so-called Beur generation have published narrative works. They include Mehdi Charef, Azouz Begag and Farida Belghoul. This study combines careful analysis of the formal structures with the authors and extensive access to unpublished writings.Narrative works by second-generation Maghrebis in France, popularly known as Beurs, are a vibrant part of the rapidly growing field of post-colonial literature. This expanded and updated edition of Alec Hargreaves' ground-breaking study combines careful analysis of the formal structures of Beur fiction with a wealth of insights derived from interviews with the authors and extensive access to unpublished writings.First published in hardback in 1991, the book is now being produced in paperback to cater for the high level of interest expressed in the hardback edition.

'... Alec G. Hargreaves has produced the most conclusive study to date of North African Immigrant literature in France'.Journal of European Studies'The historical and social background is lucidly described, and the author has profitably used both unpublished material and personal interviews with the writers and their families ... signalling a rich and exciting new phenomenon on the French literary scene.'Forum for Modern Language Studies'... the first study of its kind in English, and an important contribution to the field of "the literature of immigration." Alex Hargreaves's comprehensive overview, coupled with an excellent bibliography, makes it a valuable tool for both scholar and general reader.'Research in African Literatures

ISBN: 9781859731482

Dimensions: 216mm x 138mm x 9mm

Weight: unknown

208 pages