The Kabyle myth is a colonial trope that was propagated by French colonists in the French Algeria based on a supposed binary between Arab and Kabyle, consisting of a set of stereotypes of supposed differences between them.[1][2][3]
The myth emerged in the 19th century with French colonialism in Algeria, positing that the Kabyle people were more predisposed than Arabs to assimilate into "French civilization."[2][4]
^Cite error: The named reference :1 was invoked but never defined (see the help page).
^ abBurke, Edmund (December 2007). "France and the Classical Sociology of Islam, 1798–1962". The Journal of North African Studies. 12 (4): 551–561. doi:10.1080/13629380701633414. ISSN 1362-9387.
^Cite error: The named reference :3 was invoked but never defined (see the help page).
^Cite error: The named reference :2 was invoked but never defined (see the help page).
The Kabylemyth is a colonial trope that was propagated by French colonists in the French Algeria based on a supposed binary between Arab and Kabyle, consisting...
The Kabyle people (/kəˈbaɪl/, Kabyle: Izwawen or Leqbayel or Iqbayliyen, pronounced [iqβæjlijən], Arabic: القبائل, romanized: al-qabā'il) are a Berber...
The Kabylemyth is a colonial trope that was propagated by French colonists in the French Algeria based on a supposed binary between Arab and Kabyle, consisting...
Kabylia or Kabylie (/kəˈbɪliə/; Kabyle: Tamurt n Leqbayel or Iqbayliyen, meaning "Land of Kabyles", Arabic: منطقة القبائل, meaning "Land of the Tribes")...
the Berbers from North Africa (this story apparently deriving from the Kabylemyth invented by French colonists) and the upper classes of Ancient Egypt...
revolt and until 1892, the Kabylemyth, which supposed a variety of stereotypes based on a binary between Arabs and Kabyle people, reached its climax...
had to advance this platform was the Berber region of Kabyle, where they espoused the KabyleMyth. More recently, Berbers were alienated from the Algerian...
France At War In the Twentieth Century A la recherche du soldat perdu: Myth, Metaphor and Memory in the French Cinema of the Algerian War. Berghahan...
world. This was then solidified during French colonization when the Kabylemyth developed and 'Berbère' became a relatively common term of self-identification...
maintaining a legal cover. The Berber Dahir was based on the colonial Kabylemyth, and reinforced a dichotomy in popular Moroccan historiography: the division...
widespread perception among Kabyle leaders of a loss of autonomy in decision-making, as well as among the ǧamāʿa, Kabyle village assemblies. This was...
Algerian War. El Moudjahid, a publication of the FLN, sought to create the ‘myth’ of the female warrior and to idolize her as a martyr and linchpin in the...
[Sanhaja of the first type] is a confederation of: Kutāma-Zawāwa of the Kabyle mountains, including some areas like Algiers and Constantine that no longer...
Ottomans and Carthaginians the Kabyle people were the only or one of the few in North Africa who remained independent. The Kabyle people were incredibly resistible...
Kabyle people of Algeria. With his father, the buffalo god Itherther, they were responsible for the development of hunting and meat-eating in Kabyle mythology...
Belarusian: Млечны Шлях "Milky Way", translated from Latin Berber languages: Kabyle: Asif n igenwan The heavens river Tamashek: ⵎⵂⵍⵍⴰⵡ (mehellaw) Tasusit: ⴰⵖⴰⵔⴰⵙ...
The Beni Ades (Arabic بني عداس bnī ʕdās, Kabyle Bni Ɛdas) are an itinerant group living in north-central Algeria, negatively stereotyped by the wider population...
of Malta Kingdom of France (until 1534) Hafsid dynasty Kingdom of Kuku Kabyle people Ottoman Empire Regency of Algiers Ottoman Tunisia Kingdom of Tlemcen...
Alfred Rosenberg's racial theories (The Myth of the Twentieth Century), some of the Berbers, particularly the Kabyles and the Rif, were to be classified as...
Bourdieu undertook ethnographic research into the clash through a study of the Kabyle peoples of the Berbers, laying the groundwork for his anthropological reputation...
Albanian lands who had fought in the Sultan's armies. Berber Government: The Kabyle Polity in Pre-colonial Algeria. P.199. Hugh Roberts Bloomsbury Publishing...
Sheila Murnaghan, 1998, page 214, "Philip II founded cities at Beroe, Kabyle, and Philippopolis in 342/1, and Aegean-style urban life began to penetrate...
Kahina was a model for the militant women who fought the French. In the Kabyle insurrection of 1851 and 1857, women such as Lalla Fatma N'Soumer and Lalla...