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The Mellah Society

Deshen, Shlomo

The Mellah Society

The Mellah Society" is a compact yet detailed and fascinating account of Jewish life in precolonial Morocco, based on the voluminous but rarely studied writings of eighteenth- and nineteenth-century Judeo-Moroccan sages. Shlomo Deshen, author of several books on North African Jewish immigrants to Israel, here turns his attention to the past. Taking as his focus the tension between individualism and communal authority--symbolized by the walls of the "mellahs, " the Jewish quarters--he applies to traditional Moroccan Jewish society questions of concern to sociologists everywhere regarding political organization, economic activity, religion, and the family. From such documents as private correspondence, archival photographs, and the legal commentaries of rabbis who served in the Jewish community courts, Deshen draws out details of daily life: disputes between spouses, businessmen, craftsmen, and inheritors, the ramifications of marriage contracts, and claims involving community taxes and extortions by Muslim potentates. Linking this material with recent historical and anthropological studies of the Maghreb, Deshen reconstructs a community about which little has been known and places it squarely within the context of traditional Moroccan society. Individual chapters deal with relations between Muslims and Jews, the material conditions of Jewish life, and the nature of politics within the mellah. Deshen devotes particular attention to the nature of the Moroccan rabbinate, the sociology of the mellah synagogue, lay community leadership, and the historic role of the Sephardic heritage in Morocco after the expulsion from medieval Spain. His close study of the nature of the extendedfamily in traditional Morocco corrects popular misconceptions. Originally published in Israel in 1983, now translated and expanded by its author, "The Mellah Society" draws upon Middle Eastern and Jewish history, textual Judaic studies, and social anthropology to make a

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ISBN 9780226143408
Sprache eng
Cover Kartonierter Einband (Kt)
Verlag The University of Chicago Press
Jahr 19890315

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