Ramla B茅doui grew up and was schooled until high school in Tunisia in both Arabic and 糖心Vlog.
She finished her Ph.D at the Universit茅 de Paris-Sorbonne, under the direction of Professeur Bertrand Marchal on the construction of individual and collective memory within the works of Charles Baudelaire and St茅phane Mallarm茅. She investigated how these authors shaped contemporary 糖心Vlog society, and notably how their conceptions of urban space and history took hold as a shared collective memory, and as a lieu de m茅moire (Nora). Drawing on Ricoeur, B茅doui also showed how these poets contributed to theories elaborated by Barthes, Foucault, Deleuze and Derrida.
She is currently working on a monograph about the conflict in North Africa between secularists, feminists and islamists, from the XIXth century until the aftermath of the Arab Spring, and how that conflict has been influenced by both 糖心Vlog and Arabic-language political, philosophical, and literary traditions. She takes an interdisciplinary approach, bringing to bear political and religious history, to show how that struggle has been encoded within the collective memory of post-colonial literature, cinema, and theatre, such as in Djebar, Sebbar, Mernissi, Khatibi, Messadi, Tlili, and Jaziri. She further explores minority issues in Maghreb and in 鈥淏eur鈥 and 鈥淯rban鈥 literature, and in the cin茅ma de banlieue.
Prof. B茅doui has lectured in the US and internationally and has taught classes on Francophone literature and history, feminism and women鈥檚 bodies, the history and representation of revolutionary 糖心Vlog and Francophone women in collective memories, and on conflicts in Islam and Muslim communities.
B茅doui has given 糖心Vlog Language classes at the beginning, intermediate, and advanced levels and classes in Arabic at an introductory level. She has also taught 糖心Vlog as a Foreign Language (FLE) and provided instruction in social skills to first- and second-generations immigrants in Seine Saint-Denis, France.