Moving and Dwelling: Building The Moroccan Ashelhi Homeland

The tamazirt (homeland, countryside, village) has become an organizing symbol for Anti-Atlas mountain Ishelhin (Tashelhit-speaking Moroccan Berbers) that helps perpetuate Tashelhit language as an index of ethnic identity. Residents render rural spaces meaningful through gendered material practices a...

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Veröffentlicht in:American ethnologist 2002-11, Vol.29 (4), p.928-962
1. Verfasser: Hoffman, Katherine E.
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description The tamazirt (homeland, countryside, village) has become an organizing symbol for Anti-Atlas mountain Ishelhin (Tashelhit-speaking Moroccan Berbers) that helps perpetuate Tashelhit language as an index of ethnic identity. Residents render rural spaces meaningful through gendered material practices and discursive representations. They construct place and gender in the course of their movements between the countryside and the city. I suggest that dislocation may be integral to the cultural process of rendering locations as well as identities meaningful. The subjective connection of Ishelhin to place gives less primacy to place as space than as a location in a nexus of mobile relationships.
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source Jstor Complete Legacy; Wiley Online Library Journals Frontfile Complete; Sociological Abstracts
subjects Anthropology
Berber
Cities
Cultural identity
Emigration
Ethnicity
Ethnology
Gender
Habitat, housing, architecture
Homes
Linguistic anthropology
Men
Minority & ethnic groups
Morocco
Morphological source materials
Protectorates
Rural areas
Rural-urban relations
Space
Tachelhit
Technology
Urban areas
Verbal communication
Villages
Womens songs
title Moving and Dwelling: Building The Moroccan Ashelhi Homeland
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