Mouloud Mammeri (born Dec. 28, 1917, Taourirt-Mimoun, Alg.—died Feb. 26, 1989, near Algiers) was a Kabyle novelist, playwright, and translator who depicted the changing realities of modern-day Algeria.
Mammeri was reared in the Kabylian mountains but was educated in Morocco, Paris, and Algiers, after which he was drafted into the French army to fight in World War II. He later became a professor at the University of Algiers.
In his first novel, La Colline oubliée (1952; “The Forgotten Hill”), Mammeri recorded the experiences of his Kabylian compatriots in a story of village youths who are stifled under the burden of traditional native customs. With Le Sommeil du Juste (1955; “The Sleep of the Just”), the scene shifts from Kabyle society to the larger world, where the protagonist is shocked at the confrontation of Berber and French culture, discovering hostility and indifference abroad and eventually suffering the trauma of World War II. In L’Opium et le bâton (1965; “Opium and the Stick”), Mammeri constructed a story of the Algerian war of independence, attempting to give the struggle meaning in terms of the essential problem of freedom. His later works included a play, Le Banquet (1973), which dealt with the destruction of the Aztecs, and La Traversée (1982; “The Crossing”), a novel that centred on an alienated journalist’s attempt to return to his Berber roots.