Jacques Berque

Jacques Augustin Berque (4 June 1910, Molière, Algeria – 27 June 1995)[1] was a French scholar of Islam and sociologist of the Collège de France. His expertise was the decolonisation of Algeria and Morocco.

Berque wrote several histories on the classical and medieval periods in the Arab world, as well as highly influential works on modern era colonisation and decolonisation. He had a countervailing influence on French historiography of the first half of the twentieth century, which tended to see Arabs and in particular the inhabitants of North Africa as a less advanced people or pawns of a victorious France; Berque emphasized instead the rich Arab cultural heritage at a time when historical opinion was sharply divided. As such he was viewed as a sympathetic observer of Muslim society, arguing that the role of Islam was key to any work on the Middle East and North Africa.[2]

  1. ^ Alan Riding (June 29, 1995). "Jacques Berque, 85, Expert on Islam and Arabs". The New York Times. p. D21.
  2. ^ Whidden, James (16 March 2010). "3. Jacques Berque (1910–1995)". In Daileader, Philip; Whalen, Philip (eds.). French Historians 1900-2000: New Historical Writing in Twentieth-Century France. John Wiley & Sons. p. 23. ISBN 978-1-4443-2366-5. OCLC 1039171649.