Javascript must be enabled to continue!
The Emancipation of the Maghrebian Woman in Le Gone du Chaâba by Azouz Begag
View through CrossRef
This paper critically examines the evolving status and emancipation of Maghrebian women in Azouz Begag’s semi-autobiographical novel Le Gone du Chaâba, using feminist literary criticism within a postcolonial framework. While existing scholarship often centres on the male immigrant experience and bicultural identity in Begag’s work, this study shifts the focus to female characters who, though positioned peripherally in the narrative, articulate significant forms of resistance and agency. Set in the socio-historical context of 1960s France—a period of intensified North African immigration and cultural negotiation—the novel offers insight into how women navigate traditional constraints within a diasporic environment shaped by French secularism and evolving gender norms. The analysis identifies three primary pathways to emancipation: education, economic participation, and cultural reorientation through the French socio-legal framework. Female characters such as Zohra and Zidouma engage in subversive acts, from controlling access to language and knowledge to confronting male authority in public and adopting symbolic elements of Western modernity. These acts, although subtle and often mediated through male narration, represent a departure from the expected roles of submissive wives and mothers, suggesting a redefinition of gender identity in diaspora. The paper also incorporates intertextual comparisons with the works of Assia Djebar and Leïla Sebbar, thereby situating Begag’s narrative within a broader literary discourse on Maghrebian womanhood, resistance, and postcolonial transformation. By doing so, it demonstrates that Le Gone du Chaâba not only reflects the socio-cultural tensions of its time but also contributes meaningfully to the feminist critique of patriarchal systems in both homeland and hostland. Ultimately, this study argues that Begag’s novel, though centred on a male protagonist, participates in a wider literary project of articulating female emancipation in North African diaspora literature.
Title: The Emancipation of the Maghrebian Woman in Le Gone du Chaâba by Azouz Begag
Description:
This paper critically examines the evolving status and emancipation of Maghrebian women in Azouz Begag’s semi-autobiographical novel Le Gone du Chaâba, using feminist literary criticism within a postcolonial framework.
While existing scholarship often centres on the male immigrant experience and bicultural identity in Begag’s work, this study shifts the focus to female characters who, though positioned peripherally in the narrative, articulate significant forms of resistance and agency.
Set in the socio-historical context of 1960s France—a period of intensified North African immigration and cultural negotiation—the novel offers insight into how women navigate traditional constraints within a diasporic environment shaped by French secularism and evolving gender norms.
The analysis identifies three primary pathways to emancipation: education, economic participation, and cultural reorientation through the French socio-legal framework.
Female characters such as Zohra and Zidouma engage in subversive acts, from controlling access to language and knowledge to confronting male authority in public and adopting symbolic elements of Western modernity.
These acts, although subtle and often mediated through male narration, represent a departure from the expected roles of submissive wives and mothers, suggesting a redefinition of gender identity in diaspora.
The paper also incorporates intertextual comparisons with the works of Assia Djebar and Leïla Sebbar, thereby situating Begag’s narrative within a broader literary discourse on Maghrebian womanhood, resistance, and postcolonial transformation.
By doing so, it demonstrates that Le Gone du Chaâba not only reflects the socio-cultural tensions of its time but also contributes meaningfully to the feminist critique of patriarchal systems in both homeland and hostland.
Ultimately, this study argues that Begag’s novel, though centred on a male protagonist, participates in a wider literary project of articulating female emancipation in North African diaspora literature.
Related Results
An In-Between Identity: Azouz Begag in Shantytown Kid
An In-Between Identity: Azouz Begag in Shantytown Kid
The main purpose of this study is to examine the double identity in Begag’s le Gone du Chaâba. Taken between two completely different cultures, the beur writer exploited the langua...
The motif of ‘crossings’ in selected works by Azouz Begag
The motif of ‘crossings’ in selected works by Azouz Begag
The French writer of Algerian origin, Azouz Begag, has long been interested in the reception in France of those with immigrant origins. Their treatment often continues to be that r...
Im Spagat zwischen Zebra und Kuh Literaturübersetzen als Kulturtransfer am Beispiel von Azouz Begag (Nicht nur) Ein Praxisbericht
Im Spagat zwischen Zebra und Kuh Literaturübersetzen als Kulturtransfer am Beispiel von Azouz Begag (Nicht nur) Ein Praxisbericht
Les œuvres littéraires sont presque entrecoupées d'images linguistiques, de métaphores, de comparaisons, de realia et d'idiomes d'un monde complètement différent de la langue et de...
Guilt and Betrayal in the Works of Azouz Begag and Linda Lê
Guilt and Betrayal in the Works of Azouz Begag and Linda Lê
Azouz Begag and Linda Lê, although of different backgrounds, share the common legacy of French colonisation, a legacy which translates in their works into obsessive feelings of gui...
Mindy Calling: Size, Beauty, Race in The Mindy Project
Mindy Calling: Size, Beauty, Race in The Mindy Project
When characters in the Fox Television sitcom The Mindy Project call Mindy Lahiri fat, Mindy sees it as a case of misidentification. She reminds the character that she is a “petite ...
Competing Visions of Minority Authorship
Competing Visions of Minority Authorship
This chapter examines two opposing viewpoints regarding minority authorship in France in the mid-1980s in the context of the aftermath of the Marche des Beurs period. In his interv...
Entre «rouiller» et «s'arracher», réapprendre à flâner
Entre «rouiller» et «s'arracher», réapprendre à flâner
Azouz Begag, Learning how to stroll around again
Public transportation has given suburban areas greater access to cities and their opportunities, but they are also a prime ta...
Azouz Begag, ou les coups de gueules identitaires d’un Beur
Azouz Begag, ou les coups de gueules identitaires d’un Beur
Lorsqu’on a décidé de se départir de son espace et que l’on est difficilement supporté dans un espace d’accueil, on perd ses repères et l’on exprime son identité de manière violent...

