The French Medersa : Islamic Education and Empire in Northwest Africa

The French Médersa: Islamic Education and Empire in Northwest Africa

The French Medersa : Islamic Education and Empire in Northwest Africa

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The French Médersa: Islamic Education and Empire in Northwest Africa

This title will be released on January 15, 2026. Pre-order now. Express Delivery available with Amazon Prime.
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The French Medersa : Islamic Education and Empire in Northwest Africa

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The French Médersa explores how the French state pursued a century-long project of bicultural "Franco-Muslim" education in its northwest African colonies, resulting in a new type of school, the médersa, that combined French and Islamic curricula.French officials frequently described these schools and their students as hyphens, drawing connections between larger French and Islamic forces.Samuel D. Anderson highlights this hyphenating idea, situating Franco-Muslim education between ideas about not only France and Islam but also about tradition and modernity, and about North and West Africa. The médersa project had two goals: to create an elite class of Muslims friendly to the French imperial project and, subsequently, to mold Islam into a form that could be more easily controlled.A total of ten médersas opened across Algeria, Senegal, French Soudan, and Mauritania and closed only in the 1950s.The graduates of these schools, the medérsiens, went on to shape their societies profoundly, but
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