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Karima lazali colonial trauma5/21/2023 ![]() The systemic destruction of family and social connections contributed to feelings of loss, abandonment and injustice, feelings that were reinforced by the postcolonial state when it imposed new names on people and the land. The French state regarded Algeria as a territory with neither history nor culture people were renamed or un-named, so that family members became strangers and links with the past were broken. Many Algerians, on the other hand, are traumatized by the way that the French colonial state renamed the colonized Algerian and severed the links with community, history and genealogy. Many French feel weighed down by a colonial history that they are aware of but which they have not experienced directly. In her clinical practice, Lazali found that many of her patients experienced difficulties that can only be explained as the effects of ‘colonial trauma’ dating from the French colonization of Algeria and the postcolonial period. Following the work of Frantz Fanon in the 1950s, Lazali draws on historical materials as well as her own clinical experience as a practising psychoanalyst to shed new light on the ways in which the history of colonization leaves its traces on contemporary postcolonial selves. ![]() ![]() SmithĬolonial Trauma is a path-breaking account of the psychological and political effects of colonial domination. A Study of the Psychic and Political Consequences of Colonial Oppression in Algeria ![]()
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