"Islam’s White Conquests on the Barbary Coast: Geopolitics, Faith and Sexuality in English Captivity Narratives from Early Modern Maghreb (1678-1769)"

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"Islam’s White Conquests on the Barbary Coast: Geopolitics, Faith and Sexuality in English Captivity Narratives from Early Modern Maghreb (1678-1769)"

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dc.contributor.author Kettioui Abdelmajid
dc.description.collaborator Bekkaoui, Khalid (Directeur de la thèse)
dc.date.accessioned 2021-03-09T11:22:12Z
dc.date.available 2021-03-09T11:22:12Z
dc.date.issued 2018
dc.identifier.uri http://toubkal.imist.ma/handle/123456789/12752
dc.description.abstract This dissertation addresses the intersection of geopolitics, faith and sexuality in the English Barbary captivity narrative from early modern North Africa. It is my contention that historical and literary white captives on the coasts of North Africa constitute in English captivity discourse Islam’s white conquests. In this sense, English captives like Thomas Phelps, Joseph Pitts, Robert Boyle, Mrs. Villars, Thomas Pellow, and Elizabeth Marsh enact the irreconcilable figure of the imperial subaltern. Even when erstwhile captives made it home scathless, it is their contact with Islam that attended and haunted their homecomings and recitals. A site of ordeal but also preferment, the North African coast figures forth as a geopolitical outside to England’s and the Continent’s sweeping settlement colonialism and imperial conquests Atlantic-wise. This dissertation derives its relevance and urgency from the fact that the hostage stories of Anglo-American POWs in Afghanistan and Iraq post-9/11 “war on terror” borrow culturalist clichés on Islam’s sexual prurience and missionary violence from the Barbary captivity discourse. Privileging a Cultural Studies perspective, this dissertation centers on four representative accounts to re-create the story of English captivity in its contemporary context. The captivity narratives of Joseph Pitts (1704), William R. Chetwood (1726), Thomas Pellow (1739) and Elizabeth Marsh (1769) are set against other English and Continental contemporary captivity accounts, journals, royal missives and redemption embassies. These include the writings of Thomas Phelps (1685), Simon Ockley (1713), Daniel Defoe (1720), John Windus (1721), Miss de Bourk (1735), Maria ter Meetelen (1748) and James Sutherland (1768). This dissertation is in three parts. The first is theoretical and sets forth past-colonialism as a theoretical framework for understanding Anglo-Maghrebi maritime encounters in early modernity. Ex-apostates in the Maghreb are theorized through the figure of the reverting renegade as a hybrid subject. The second gives a geopolitical, historical and literary account of captivity in the Maghreb. In the third part, the captivity narratives of Pitts, Pellow, Chetwood, and Marsh are set within their larger historical contexts and, as such, read against other contemporary English accounts of captivity. fr_FR
dc.language.iso en fr_FR
dc.publisher Université Sidi Mohamed Ben Abdellah, Faculté des Lettres et des Sciences Humaines - Dhar El Mahraz - , Fès fr_FR
dc.relation.ispartofseries 24/2021;
dc.subject Cultural studies fr_FR
dc.subject Islam fr_FR
dc.subject White conquests fr_FR
dc.subject Barbary captivity narratives fr_FR
dc.subject Joseph Pitts fr_FR
dc.subject William R. Chetwood fr_FR
dc.subject Thomas Pellow fr_FR
dc.subject Elizabeth Marsh fr_FR
dc.subject English fr_FR
dc.subject North Africa fr_FR
dc.subject Geopolitics fr_FR
dc.subject Faith fr_FR
dc.subject Sexuality fr_FR
dc.subject Early modern fr_FR
dc.subject Acculturation fr_FR
dc.subject Orientalism fr_FR
dc.title "Islam’s White Conquests on the Barbary Coast: Geopolitics, Faith and Sexuality in English Captivity Narratives from Early Modern Maghreb (1678-1769)" fr_FR
dc.description.laboratoire Cultural Studies: Culture and Identity in Morocco, (UFR) fr_FR
dc.description.laboratoire English, (Départ.) fr_FR

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