© 2004 by Society for French Studies
Rebirth in Sorrow: La Bataille d'Alger
1 Royal Holloway, University of London
This article examines the attempt by the makers of the 1965 docudrama, La Bataille dAlger, to depict and elucidate the experience of political violence, particularly torture, during the period 1956-57, the apogee of the Franco-Algerian War. Over the past three years, the atrocities committed by the French in the name of pacification have come under increasing scrutiny from historians, journalists, and film directors alike. Yet La Bataille d'Alger remains the most powerful and arguably the best-known work on the topic, in part because it challenges the same ontological certainties (the presence of the living, the absence of the dead) that practices such as abduction or disappearance and clandestine execution bury. The films objective, however, is antithetical to disappearance: this objective is to give voice to a history that simultaneously resists and demands articulation, and ultimately to reconstitute the fragmented or vanished subject through narrative; to use cinema to summon the ghosts of the past.