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Genocide in Libya: Shar, a Hidden Colonial History

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Winner of the L. Carl Brown AIMS Book Prize in North African Studies 2022

This original research on the forgotten Libyan genocide specifically recovers the hidden history of the fascist Italian concentration camps (1929-1934) through the oral testimonies of Libyan survivors. This book links the Libyan genocide through cross-cultural and comparative readings to the colonial roots of the Holocaust and genocide studies.

Between 1929 and 1934, thousands of Libyans lost their lives, directly murdered and victim to Italian deportations and internments. They were forcibly removed from their homes, marched across vast tracks of deserts and mountains, and confined behind barbed wire in 16 concentration camps. It is a story that Libyans have recorded in their Arabic oral history and narratives while remaining hidden and unexplored in a systematic fashion, and never in the manner that has allowed us to comprehend and begin to understand the extent of their existence.

Based on the survivors' testimonies, which took over ten years of fieldwork and research to document, this new and original history of the genocide is a key resource for readers interested in genocide and Holocaust studies, colonial and postcolonial studies, and African and Middle Eastern studies.

ISBN-13: 9780367468897

Media Type: Paperback

Publisher: Taylor & Francis

Publication Date: 08-07-2020

Pages: 234

Product Dimensions: 6.12(w) x 9.19(h) x (d)

Ali Abdullatif Ahmida is a professor and founding chair of the Department of Political Science, College of Arts and Sciences, at the University of New England, USA. His speciality is political theory, comparative politics, and historical sociology. His scholarship focuses on power, agency, and anti-colonial resistance in North Africa, especially modern Libya.

Table of Contents

List of illustrations x

Acknowledgments xi

A note on the transliteration xv

Glossary xvi

Abbreviations xx

Introduction: thinking about the forgotten Libyan genocide 2

1 Where are the survivors? The politics of missing archives and fieldwork 17

2 Eurocentrism, silence, and memory of genocide 50

3 "We died because of Shar, evil my son": survivors' stories of death and trauma in the camps 75

4 After the genocide: hidden and state histories 113

5 Postscript: rethinking postcolonial state formation, crisis, and collapse 145

Conclusion: toward a paradigm shift, decentering Italian Fascism and genocide studies 167

Appendices 176

References 187

Index 197