
Art in the Service of Colonialism
Description
The contradictions between reformist goals and the old order, nevertheless, added to social dislocations and led to rebellion against French hegemony. Irbouh focuses on how French women infiltrated the feminine Moroccan milieu to buttress colonial ideology, and how, at critical moments, Moroccan women and their daughters rejected traditional passive roles and sabotaged colonial plans. France's legacy in Moroccan arts and crafts provoked a backlash in the postcolonial period. After independence local artists, searching for their own identities, sought to reclaim their authenticity. The struggle to define a pristine visual heritage still rages, and the author, by underlining French contributions to Moroccan artistic and craft production, challenges the conclusions of the artists and critics who have argued for the establishment of an unadulterated art devoid of most or even all foreign influences. As in so many areas of Moroccan society, this book reveals that the weight of colonial history remains heavily present.
In this well-conceived book based on original archival sources Hamid Irbouh investigates how French colonial administrators employed French women to inculcate colonial ideology by establishing new craft schools for notable and poor families in Moroccan cities. The French intended not only to teach modernized versions of old Moroccan crafts, but also wanted to instill new work habits and modern concepts of time into the girls and young women who attended their schools. Dr. Irbouh demonstrates how French women administrators took the lead in this effort and also shows how Moroccan women absorbed their lessons, but also resisted the colonial enterprise. His is a novel approach to colonial art history, situating Moroccan art production in large social, political and ideological contexts.
Reviews / Votes
"'Art in the Service of Colonialism' sharpens debates and causes reconsideration of assumptions about the nature of colonial power in its relation to visual culture. It will interest art historians, historians of North Africa and the Middle East, and students of colonialism, postcolonialism, cultural studies, and popular culture. Hamid Irbouh's study is a highly original, meticulously researched and pioneering investigation. This book will interest a very wide range of readers, not only in the history of Morocco, but also in art and design history more generally and especially, the rapidly growing field of postcolonial studies. It sheds immense light on the distinctive characteristics of contemporary popular culture in this North African country. - Anthony King, Bartle Professor of Art History and Sociology, State University of New York at Binghamton"More details
Person
Content
Archive Centres and Libraries Mentioned in the Text
List of Illustrations
Acnowledgements
Introduction
The Establishment of French Colonial Hegemony over Morocco
Contemporary Moroccan Scholarship on Moroccan Art Production
French Colonial Art Education in Morocco
Book Outline
Part One: Classifications and Associations
Chapter One : Framing Morocco's Crafts
Chapter Two: Diffusing Colonial Order
Part Two: Design and Process of Colonial Education
Chapter Three: Colonial Mass Education
Chapter Four: Vocational Schools for Men and the French Infiltration of Morocco's Traditional Industry
Chapter Five: Women's Vocational Schools
Part Three: Originality, Drawing and Colonial Exploitation
Chapter Six: Vocational Training and Patriotism in France
Chapter Seven: Drawing as an Apparatus of Exploitation
Chapter Eight: The Open Workshops and the Casablanca School of Fine Arts
By Way of Conclusion: The Burden of Cultural Decolonisation
The Populists
The Nativists
The Bipictorialists
Notes
Bibliography
Index