
- Coming soon
- Publisher:
- Cambridge University Press
- Expected online publication date:
- February 2026
- Print publication year:
- 2026
- Online ISBN:
- 9781009700559
In the wake of independence from French colonialism, a generation of North African nationalist leaders and progressive thinkers reimagined their futures through essays, periodicals, and publishing networks. Leaping Decolonization explores how these debates unfolded from the early 1960s to the early 1980s, when intellectuals across Algeria, Morocco, and Tunisia challenged colonial legacies, questioned the meaning of progress, and redefined the role of tradition in their societies. Idriss Jebari constructs a transnational intellectual history grounded in the lived experience of the region's post-colonial transformations. It is organized in a series of 'debates' on the meaning of decolonization, ranging from national culture to social emancipation. This study further sheds light on how radical thought was produced under authoritarianism, seeking to capture the aspirations of youth movements, and how North Africa's decolonization connects with other historical experiences. In doing so, Jebari addresses ongoing questions about the meaning of global history and the voices of intellectual peripheries from the Global South on the world stage.
‘This insightful and well-researched book situates a generation of scholars and writers in Morocco, Algeria, and Tunisia within Arab and global intellectual histories and studies of decolonization. Jerbari’s detailed readings and textual analyses mark an important contribution to understandings of revolution, development, culture and heritage across North Africa as they were articulated in dialogue with Beirut and Paris.’
Amy Kallander - Syracuse University
‘Leaping Pages of Decolonization takes us on a journey through the ‘dusty books’ and periodicals, an intellectual history of North African decolonization during the 1960s and 1970s. The story is fascinating, sympathetic and sophisticated, it centres on regional time and space but invites us to transcend boundaries of thought and borders. Focusing on the ‘publishing infrastructure’ makes an invaluable epistemic recovery of a unique extended moment of decolonization.’
David Ryan - University College Cork, Ireland
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