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ISBN: PB: 9780226292557

ISBN: HB: 9780226292410

University of Chicago Press

November 2015

240 pp.

22.8x15.2 cm

9 halftones, 1 line drawing

PB:
£22,00
QTY:
HB:
£68,00
QTY:

Return to Casablanca

Jews, Muslims, and an Israeli Anthropologist

In this book, Israeli anthropologist Andre Levy returns to his birthplace in Casablanca to provide a deeply nuanced and compelling study of the relationships between Moroccan Jews and Muslims there. Ranging over a century of history – from the Jewish Enlightenment and the impending colonialism of the late nineteenth century to today's modern Arab state – Levy paints a rich portrait of two communities pressed together, of the tremendous mobility that has characterized the past century, and of the paradoxes that complicate the cultural identities of the present. Levy visits a host of sites and historical figures to assemble a compelling history of social change, while seamlessly interweaving his study with personal accounts of his returns to his homeland. Central to this story is the massive migration of Jews out of Morocco. Levy traces the institutional and social changes such migrations cause for those who choose to stay, introducing the concept of "contraction" to depict the way Jews deal with the ramifications of their demographic dwindling. Turning his attention outward from Morocco, he goes on to explore the greater complexities of the Jewish diaspora and the essential paradox at the heart of his adventure – leaving Israel to return home.  

About the Author

Andre Levy is a senior lecturer at Ben-Gurion University of the Negev in Beersheba, Israel. He is co-editor of "Homelands and Diasporas: Holy Lands and Other Places".  

Reviews

"According to David Brooks, 'Going back is a creative process. The events of childhood are like the Hebrew alphabet; the vowels are missing, and the older self has to make sense of them'. Levy's return from Israel to the country of his birth proceeds from his first fearful encounter, through the uncertainties of the Gulf War, to the discovery of the deeply ambivalent approach of the Moroccan Muslims to their Jewish neighbors. Analytic yet engaged, wary yet appreciative, Levy offers a realistic and thoughtful example of the ways in which stereotypes need to be confronted directly, and how emotion can be harnessed to comprehension and mutual understanding" – Lawrence Rosen, Princeton University

"There are few Israeli anthropologists who would dare to revisit their Middle Eastern birth home as ethnographers after years of migration and exile with the objective to study the remaining Jewish communities who still remain in their country of origin. Levy has done so, and has succeeded in producing one of the best ethnographies about home, displacement, and changing identities and communities" – Aomar Boum, University of California, Los Angeles