Description

Book Synopsis

A Sephardi Sea explores how practices of memory- and heritage-making has filled an identity vacuum in the three countries and helps the Jews from North Africa and Egypt to define their Jewishness in Europe and Israel today.



Trade Review

"Micoli has done a masterful research on the many forms of North African and Middle Eastern Jews post-colonial exiles. Digging in the depth of this memory lane, he presents the full texture of their narratives throughout the Mediterranean sea and shows with many luxurious details and stories, how their many migrations from its southern shores to the northern ones, redefined their identity, after the Shoah. A Sephardi Sea shows the centrality of this memory of migration and exile in the making of Sephardi and Mizrahi identities, with the Mediterranean sea at its center, and main site. It fills and immense gap in our knowledge of yet a little known exodus. Miccoli proves to be an avid interpreter of the present, with its many acute observations of Jewish Muslim mixed associations of migrants as sites of the future of Europe. A must read."—Yolande Cohen, Université du Québec à Montréal

"In A Sephardi Sea, Miccoli took upon himself an important task that combines different scholarly approaches in an attempt to better understand the modes and practices that maintain the identity of communities in times of drastic changes - namely migration. This is not a history book, but rather an attempt to document the way migrants, men and women, negotiate between the past- looked upon nostalgically - and the present. Between official and non-official attempts to maintain identities and connect the past with the present. The interaction between time and space add to our understanding of ways of coping with trauma of migration."—Esther Schely-Newman, The Hebrew University



Table of Contents

Acknowledgments
Note on Transliteration
Introduction: Being Jewish in the Mediterranean
1. Writing Exile
2. (In)tangible Heritages
3. An Unfinished Present
Conclusion: Afterlives of exile
References
Index

A Sephardi Sea

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    A Paperback / softback by Dario Miccoli

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      View other formats and editions of A Sephardi Sea by Dario Miccoli

      Publisher: Indiana University Press
      Publication Date: 26/07/2022
      ISBN13: 9780253062932, 978-0253062932
      ISBN10: 0253062934

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      A Sephardi Sea explores how practices of memory- and heritage-making has filled an identity vacuum in the three countries and helps the Jews from North Africa and Egypt to define their Jewishness in Europe and Israel today.



      Trade Review

      "Micoli has done a masterful research on the many forms of North African and Middle Eastern Jews post-colonial exiles. Digging in the depth of this memory lane, he presents the full texture of their narratives throughout the Mediterranean sea and shows with many luxurious details and stories, how their many migrations from its southern shores to the northern ones, redefined their identity, after the Shoah. A Sephardi Sea shows the centrality of this memory of migration and exile in the making of Sephardi and Mizrahi identities, with the Mediterranean sea at its center, and main site. It fills and immense gap in our knowledge of yet a little known exodus. Miccoli proves to be an avid interpreter of the present, with its many acute observations of Jewish Muslim mixed associations of migrants as sites of the future of Europe. A must read."—Yolande Cohen, Université du Québec à Montréal

      "In A Sephardi Sea, Miccoli took upon himself an important task that combines different scholarly approaches in an attempt to better understand the modes and practices that maintain the identity of communities in times of drastic changes - namely migration. This is not a history book, but rather an attempt to document the way migrants, men and women, negotiate between the past- looked upon nostalgically - and the present. Between official and non-official attempts to maintain identities and connect the past with the present. The interaction between time and space add to our understanding of ways of coping with trauma of migration."—Esther Schely-Newman, The Hebrew University



      Table of Contents

      Acknowledgments
      Note on Transliteration
      Introduction: Being Jewish in the Mediterranean
      1. Writing Exile
      2. (In)tangible Heritages
      3. An Unfinished Present
      Conclusion: Afterlives of exile
      References
      Index

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