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Alain Ruscio, born in 1947, is a French historian specializing in colonial history, particularly that of Indochina, Vietnam, Algeria, and more broadly, the relationship between colonization, decolonization, and colonial representations. He established himself as an independent researcher after an intellectual career focused on the contemporary history of colonial empires, with particular attention to independence struggles and French discourses on colonization. Born in 1947, he is associated with Paris in some biographical entries, which describe him as being from the 19th arrondissement. His academic training culminated in a doctorate in history from Paris I University in 1984, based on a dissertation devoted to French communists and the Indochina War. This dissertation marked the starting point of extensive research on colonial Indochina, and subsequently on other French colonial territories. Before dedicating himself fully to his work as a historian, Alain Ruscio also worked as a journalist, notably for L’Humanité. He was a special correspondent in Vietnam and Cambodia between 1978 and 1980, which enriched his knowledge of the Asian context and his enduring interest in the history of contemporary Vietnam. Several accounts also describe him as having directed an information and documentation center on contemporary Vietnam, amassing a significant collection of documents on the subject. His work is distinguished by its strong thematic coherence. He initially focused on Indochina and the Indochina War, then broadened his research to encompass French colonial history as a whole, colonial imaginaries, and the continuities between colonization and contemporary racism. His books are often documentary, analytical, and politically engaged, with a focus on combining archival research, political history, and the history of representations, including: Living in Vietnam (1981). The CGT and the Indochina War 1945-1954 (1984). French Communists and the Indochina War, 1944-1954 (1985). Tragic Decolonization: A History of French Decolonization, 1945-1962 (1987). The French Indochina War (1945-1954) (1992). The White Man's Creed: French Colonial Perspectives, 19th-20th Centuries (1995/2002), which became one of his key works on the colonial imagination. Are Colonies Good? Sarkozy's France Facing Colonial History, National Identity, and Immigration (2011). Nostalgia: The Endless History of the OAS (2015). Communists and Algeria: From the Origins to the War of Independence, 1920–1962 (2019). When the Civilizers Depicted the Natives: Drawings and Caricatures in the Colonial Era (2020). The First Algerian War: A History of Conquest and Resistance, 1830–1852 (2024). He has also authored other works related to his research and edited volumes, particularly those concerning Indochina, French colonization, and racial representations. Alain Ruscio is also a contributor to the website histoirecoloniale.net.

When French writer Marguerite Duras (1914-96) published her novel The Sea Wall in 1950, she came very close to winning the prestigious Prix Goncourt. Meanwhile, in Indochina, France was suffering its first military defeats in its war against the Việt Minh, the rebel movement for independence.

Emilie Busquant, a woman with an exceptional destiny, was born on March 3, 1901, in Neuves-Maisons, Lorraine. In 1923, she moved to Paris to find work and met Messali Hadj, who had also come seeking employment. A beautiful love story began; she fell in love with both a man and a cause: the independence of Algeria. Together, in 1926, they founded the first Algerian independence party, the North African Star (Étoile Nord-Africaine). She would support the Algerian people's struggle throughout her life.


In 1936, Gaston Revel entered the École Normale in Algiers, where he was supposed to learn how to "educate the native." It was also during this time that he began to take an interest in politics: he was drawn to the Popular Front, then to Spanish anarchism, and finally to communism. From 1940 to 1955, he taught in Algeria, first in rural areas, then in Bejaia. He returned to Europe because of the war and landed in Provence in September 1914, following the Allied advance. It was in Bejaia, in 1945, that he became fully committed to the Algerian Communist Party: in 1953, he ran for municipal office in the second electoral district (reserved for Algerians) and sat alongside the Muslims. In 1955, at the beginning of the war, he was forced to leave Algeria against his will. But, like thousands of other "red feet," he returned there in 1962 and resumed his teaching career. From all those years, he left a complete and deeply committed record, many letters, notebooks, and newspaper articles.
