Fettouma Touati
Life
Fettouma Touati was born in Azazoa, a small mountainous village in the Kabylia region of Algeria. Her parents emigrated to France in 1951, before the Algerian War of Independence. In 1975 she returned to Kabylia for four years, and worked as a librarian in the University of Tizi Ouzou.[1][2]
Her novel Le printemps désespéré (Desperate Spring) charted the lives of three generations of Algerian women, highlighting the way in which a network of women's relationships supported them in coping with the recurrent racism and sexism suffered by Algerian women.[1]
Works
- Le printemps désespéré: vies d'Algériennes. 1984. Translated into English by Ros Schwartz as Desparate Spring, The Women's Press, 1987.
References
- Killam, Douglas; Rowe, Ruth, eds. (2000). "Fettouma, Touati". The companion to African literatures. Oxford: J. Currey. p. 97.
- Lindsey Moore (2008). Arab, Muslim, Woman: Voice and Vision in Postcolonial Literature and Film. Routledge. pp. 49–51. ISBN 978-1-134-13878-4.
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