'This insightful and well-researched book situates a generation of scholars and writers in Morocco, Algeria, and Tunisia within Arab and global intellectual histories and studies of decolonization. Jebari's detailed readings and textual analyses mark an important contribution to understandings of revolution, development, culture and heritage across North Africa as they were articulated in dialogue with Beirut and Paris.' Amy Kallander, Syracuse University
'Leaping Pages of Decolonization takes us on a journey through the 'dusty books' and periodicals, an intellectual history of North African decolonization during the 1960s and 1970s. The story is fascinating, sympathetic and sophisticated, it centres on regional time and space but invites us to transcend boundaries of thought and borders. Focusing on the 'publishing infrastructure' makes an invaluable epistemic recovery of a unique extended moment of decolonization.' David Ryan, University College Cork, Ireland