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Terrorism

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Shifting Masculinities From North Africa: In Yasmina Khadra, Tahar Ben Jelloun, Mohamed Leftah And Abdellah Taïa’S Fictions, Melyssa Haffaf Aug 2018

Shifting Masculinities From North Africa: In Yasmina Khadra, Tahar Ben Jelloun, Mohamed Leftah And Abdellah Taïa’S Fictions, Melyssa Haffaf

Open Access Dissertations

This dissertation concentrates on four texts by Maghrebian writers, published between the late 1990s to the 2000s, and explores the ways in which their fictional narratives portray, articulate and challenge the dominant discourse on masculinity in postcolonial North Africa. The four novels are the following: Wolf Dreams (1999) by Yasmina Khadra, Leaving Tangier (2006) by Tahar Ben Jelloun, An Arab Melancholia (2008) by Abdellah Taïa and Le dernier combat du Captain Ni’mat (2011) by Mohamed Leftah. I demonstrate that despite a strong influence of hegemonic models of masculinity promoted and cultivated during and after the decolonization processes, the masculinities presented …


"Terrorists” Imaginaries: Social Exclusion, Queerness, Repressive Apparatus And The Emergence Of Post-Religious Terrorism In Contemporary Maghrebian Francophone Literature And Film, Thouraya Ferid Jun 2018

"Terrorists” Imaginaries: Social Exclusion, Queerness, Repressive Apparatus And The Emergence Of Post-Religious Terrorism In Contemporary Maghrebian Francophone Literature And Film, Thouraya Ferid

Open Access Dissertations

I examine the narratives imaginaries of Terrorism among some authors and filmmakers between 2007 and 2012. I argue that these oeuvres give rise to a new understanding of terrorism that is rooted in a series of traumatic experiences endured by the subject. These humiliations lead to the urgent need of a radical revenge: The terrorist act. The new terrorism is rooted in the "radical multitude" of oppressed singularities. Literary and cinematic fiction from the Maghreb can be considered as what Saldivar in "Unsettling Race, Coloniality and Caste” (2007), calls a "locus of enunciation" on terrorism. This enables the emergence of …


Social Construction, Informed Preferences, And Citizens' Support For U.S. Counterterrorism Policies, Aleksandar Jankovski May 2013

Social Construction, Informed Preferences, And Citizens' Support For U.S. Counterterrorism Policies, Aleksandar Jankovski

Open Access Dissertations

I hypothesize that U.S. citizens’ support for the counterterrorism policy of their government is, in the main, determined and explained by the various ways in which they have come to understand terrorism, security, and the history of U.S. engagement abroad. I test the hypotheses by way of an ordered probit model. The empirical findings lend support to the hypotheses.