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  <title><![CDATA[Le blanc de l'Algerie: Recit]]></title>
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  <description><![CDATA[In Algerian White, Assia Djebar gives a chilling firsthand account of religious extremism and intellectual persecution in her native Algeria. She recounts the lives of three of her friends &#151; a psychiatrist, a sociologist, and a playwright &#151; who were killed in the aftermath of the 1956 struggle for independence. But Djebar will not allow her friends to be silenced. Her powerful memoir grows from conversations remembered and imagined with these fallen comrades and reflects on the horrors of war and exile. This is a chilling first-hand account of the religious extremism and intellectual persecution that plagues the author's homeland. &quot;A hymn to friendship and the enduring power of language, ... also a requiem for a nation's unfinished literature.&quot; &#151; The New York Times]]></description>
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        <name><![CDATA[Assia Djebar]]></name>
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    <![CDATA[Le Blanc De L'Argerie]]>
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    <![CDATA[In Algerian White, Assia Djebar gives a chilling firsthand account of religious extremism and intellectual persecution in her native Algeria. She recounts the lives of three of her friends &#151; a psychiatrist, a sociologist, and a playwright &#151; who were killed in the aftermath of the 1956 struggle for independence. But Djebar will not allow her friends to be silenced. Her powerful memoir grows from conversations remembered and imagined with these fallen comrades and reflects on the horrors of war and exile. This is a chilling first-hand account of the religious extremism and intellectual persecution that plagues the author's homeland. &quot;A hymn to friendship and the enduring power of language, ... also a requiem for a nation's unfinished literature.&quot; &#151; The New York Times]]>
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  <date_updated>Sat Aug 25 22:35:35 -0700 2007</date_updated>
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    <body><![CDATA[It was very hard for me to read this book. I was in Algiers during the events taking place in the book/Algiers.<br/>It brought back a lot of memories as well as enlightened me on many events behind the scenes that the regular citizens didn't know about..<br/>]]></body>
    
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    <![CDATA[In Algerian White, Assia Djebar gives a chilling firsthand account of religious extremism and intellectual persecution in her native Algeria. She recounts the lives of three of her friends &#151; a psychiatrist, a sociologist, and a playwright &#151; who were killed in the aftermath of the 1956 struggle for independence. But Djebar will not allow her friends to be silenced. Her powerful memoir grows from conversations remembered and imagined with these fallen comrades and reflects on the horrors of war and exile. This is a chilling first-hand account of the religious extremism and intellectual persecution that plagues the author's homeland. &quot;A hymn to friendship and the enduring power of language, ... also a requiem for a nation's unfinished literature.&quot; &#151; The New York Times]]>
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  <read_at>Fri Oct 01 00:00:00 -0700 2004</read_at>
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    <body><![CDATA[Djebar's musings on the consequences of war in Algeria - friends lost, ideals shattered - are beautiful and tragic and magnificently expressed. She has powerful insights on love and language; I cried reading them.]]></body>
    
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    <![CDATA[In Algerian White, Assia Djebar gives a chilling firsthand account of religious extremism and intellectual persecution in her native Algeria. She recounts the lives of three of her friends &#151; a psychiatrist, a sociologist, and a playwright &#151; who were killed in the aftermath of the 1956 struggle for independence. But Djebar will not allow her friends to be silenced. Her powerful memoir grows from conversations remembered and imagined with these fallen comrades and reflects on the horrors of war and exile. This is a chilling first-hand account of the religious extremism and intellectual persecution that plagues the author's homeland. &quot;A hymn to friendship and the enduring power of language, ... also a requiem for a nation's unfinished literature.&quot; &#151; The New York Times]]>
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    <![CDATA[In Algerian White, Assia Djebar gives a chilling firsthand account of religious extremism and intellectual persecution in her native Algeria. She recounts the lives of three of her friends &#151; a psychiatrist, a sociologist, and a playwright &#151; who were killed in the aftermath of the 1956 struggle for independence. But Djebar will not allow her friends to be silenced. Her powerful memoir grows from conversations remembered and imagined with these fallen comrades and reflects on the horrors of war and exile. This is a chilling first-hand account of the religious extremism and intellectual persecution that plagues the author's homeland. &quot;A hymn to friendship and the enduring power of language, ... also a requiem for a nation's unfinished literature.&quot; &#151; The New York Times]]>
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    <![CDATA[In Algerian White, Assia Djebar gives a chilling firsthand account of religious extremism and intellectual persecution in her native Algeria. She recounts the lives of three of her friends &#151; a psychiatrist, a sociologist, and a playwright &#151; who were killed in the aftermath of the 1956 struggle for independence. But Djebar will not allow her friends to be silenced. Her powerful memoir grows from conversations remembered and imagined with these fallen comrades and reflects on the horrors of war and exile. This is a chilling first-hand account of the religious extremism and intellectual persecution that plagues the author's homeland. &quot;A hymn to friendship and the enduring power of language, ... also a requiem for a nation's unfinished literature.&quot; &#151; The New York Times]]>
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    <![CDATA[Algerian White]]>
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    <![CDATA[In Algerian White, Assia Djebar gives a chilling firsthand account of religious extremism and intellectual persecution in her native Algeria. She recounts the lives of three of her friends &#151; a psychiatrist, a sociologist, and a playwright &#151; who were killed in the aftermath of the 1956 struggle for independence. But Djebar will not allow her friends to be silenced. Her powerful memoir grows from conversations remembered and imagined with these fallen comrades and reflects on the horrors of war and exile. This is a chilling first-hand account of the religious extremism and intellectual persecution that plagues the author's homeland. &quot;A hymn to friendship and the enduring power of language, ... also a requiem for a nation's unfinished literature.&quot; &#151; The New York Times]]>
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    <![CDATA[In Algerian White, Assia Djebar gives a chilling firsthand account of religious extremism and intellectual persecution in her native Algeria. She recounts the lives of three of her friends &#151; a psychiatrist, a sociologist, and a playwright &#151; who were killed in the aftermath of the 1956 struggle for independence. But Djebar will not allow her friends to be silenced. Her powerful memoir grows from conversations remembered and imagined with these fallen comrades and reflects on the horrors of war and exile. This is a chilling first-hand account of the religious extremism and intellectual persecution that plagues the author's homeland. &quot;A hymn to friendship and the enduring power of language, ... also a requiem for a nation's unfinished literature.&quot; &#151; The New York Times]]>
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    <![CDATA[In Algerian White, Assia Djebar uses the deaths of three friends &#151; a sociologist, a psychiatrist, and a playwright &#151; as a springboard for a meditation on the history of modern Algeria. She provides an insider's view of the horrors of civil war and the intricate political and social issues that have at times threatened to overwhelm this multilayered society. Living in exile in France and the United States, Djebar feels remorse for having left her native country, and this sensibility accounts for much of the book's poetry and power. Algerian White opens with Djebar's memories of the deaths of her friends. Next, she describes their last moments. In part three, she interweaves important historical events with the processions of her friends' burials. Finally, she examines the writer's role in a land where freedom of speech has been overruled. &#147;A hymn to friendship and the enduring power of language.&#148; &#151; The New York Times]]>
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