Academic literature on the topic 'Algerian Motion pictures'

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Journal articles on the topic "Algerian Motion pictures"

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"A Meteosat motion picture of a weather situation relevant to locust reports." Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London. B, Biological Sciences 328, no. 1251 (June 30, 1990): 679–88. http://dx.doi.org/10.1098/rstb.1990.0136.

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The motion picture, of Meteosat VIS and IR half-hourly image sequences, covers the North African area with close-ups of northwest Africa from 28 to 31 March 1985. A cold front and horizontal vortex rolls, with their convergent upward atmospheric motions, visualized through dust being transported south from the Atlas mountains, may have transported locust swarms from the Algerian breeding area down to southeast Mauritania, where specimens were observed a few days after the event. This followed more than a year of no locust observations at all. Observation of dust in the atmosphere may give some insight into the transport and behaviour of locusts, both on the synoptic and mesoscale.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Algerian Motion pictures"

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Peters, Claire Isla MacLeod. "Le Paris de la mémoire : traces of the Holocaust and the Algerian War in the 'city of light'." Thesis, University of Birmingham, 2013. http://etheses.bham.ac.uk//id/eprint/4714/.

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This thesis examines contemporary literary and cinematic representations of Paris in relation to the dynamics of collective memory, arguing that the city emerges as a privileged site in which to explore critical questions of identity, memory and citizenship in France. In this comparative approach to representations of memories of the Holocaust and the Algerian War in France, I identify a shared lexicon of urban space simultaneously hiding and revealing traces of the past in the contemporary city. This study of memories and their urban and palimpsestic representations challenges the tendency to separate the disciplines of postcolonial and post-Holocaust studies, and in so doing contests the conceptual separation of metropolitan, European and colonial histories. As such, it contributes to a growing interdisciplinary field of French and Francophone studies that extends the object of study beyond the purely metropolitan. I draw on and engage with theoretical work in the fields of memory studies, postcolonial studies and post-Holocaust studies to consider how urban space opens up a legitimate new way of engaging with the overlaps and intersections between different memories without undermining the crucial element of difference. Underpinned by poststructuralist concerns, memory emerges here as an inherently constructed concept.
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Llorens, Natasha Marie. "Specters of Liberation, Children of Violence: Experimental Film in Algeria 1965-1979." Thesis, 2021. https://doi.org/10.7916/d8-8w0n-j526.

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In this dissertation, I map the experimental margin of Algerian cinema between 1965 and 1979 against the paradigmatic film about Algeria, Gillo Pontecorvo and Yacef Saadi’s The Battle of Algiers (1965). I focus on the period immediately following the successful conclusion of an eight-year war waged by the Algerian National Liberation Front against France. It is known as the “Golden Age” of Algerian cinema, a span of nearly fifteen years after the film industry was nationalized when culture was generously financed by newly exploited petrochemical resources in the Sahara. This mapping has two aims, the first of which is straightforward: I read four films made in Algeria by Algerian filmmakers closely in light of their socio-political contexts and I argue that together they represent a significant and overlooked minor history in Algerian film. The films are Tahia Ya Didou! by Mohamed Zinet (1969), Omar Gatlato by Merzack Allouache (1976), La Nouba des Femmes du Mont Chenoua by Assia Djebar (1976), and Nahla by Farouk Beloufa (1979). They are significant formally and in terms of their critical reception at the time and since the late 1960s and early 1970s among Algerian filmmakers, but they are crucially significant as ambivalent testimony about life after the colonial period and about the traumatic effect of the long and violent struggle for liberation. Second, I read these films against the Battle of Algiers in its socio-political context. I argue that the aspects of the War of Liberation that fall out of this canonical portrait of decolonial resistance are precisely those taken up by the experimental margin I examine elsewhere in the dissertation. My reading of Pontecorvo and Saadi’s classic film is critical not only in terms of its representation of violence perpetrated by the French but also in the aspects of Algerian history it occludes, namely the history of women. If the margin provides a space for testimony for the trauma of the war, the Battle of Algiers reifies a Fanonian understanding of revolutionary violence, an understanding that is constitutively exclusive of women’s role in the war. I read extensively with Karima Lazali on the clinical situation of Algerians post-war. I draw on archival materials from Algeria and France including production notes and documentation of contemporary reception, especially by Algerians. On contextual questions, I read Algerian sociologists, politicians, filmmakers, and film critics as much as possible. My commitment to de-centering especially a French perspective on Algeria allows the rich semiotic exchange between filmmakers, artists, architects, and political activists to emerge and to challenge the hegemonic perspective that Algerian culture post-war was entirely dominated by its authoritarian government.
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Books on the topic "Algerian Motion pictures"

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Oudjedi, Larbi. Rupture et changement dans la Colline oubliée. Tizi-Ouzou: Editions Achab, 2009.

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Chentouf, Adda. 50 ans de cinema en algerie: (1964-2014) : de la splendeur passée au marasme actuel. Alger]: Éditions Dar El Adib, 2016.

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Weber-Feve, Stacey. Re-hybridizing transnational domesticity and femininity: Women's contemporary filmmaking and lifewriting of France, Algeria, and Tunisia. Lanham: Lexington Books, 2010.

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Weber-Feve, Stacey. Re-hybridizing transnational domesticity and femininity: Women's contemporary filmmaking and lifewriting in France, Algeria, and Tunisia. Lanham: Lexington Books, 2010.

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Léal, Rebecca E. Mon père, l'étranger: Stéréotypes et représentations des immigrés algériens en France. Paris: L'Harmattan, 2020.

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1919-, Pontecorvo Gillo, ed. The battle of Algiers. [Irvington, NY]: Criterion Collection, 2004.

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Austin, Guy. Algerian National Cinema. Manchester University Press, 2016.

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Austin, Guy. Algerian National Cinema. Manchester University Press, 2019.

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Austin, Guy. Algerian National Cinema. Manchester University Press, 2021.

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Algerian National Cinema. Manchester University Press, 2012.

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