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Channeling Moroccanness

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This book explores how Moroccans engage communicative failure as they seek to shape social and political relations in urban Fez.
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  • 01 December 2020
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Honorable Mention, 2022 L. Carl Brown AIMS Book Prize in North African Studies

What does it mean to connect as a people through mass media? This book approaches that question by exploring how Moroccans engage communicative failure as they seek to shape social and political relations in urban Fez. Over the last decade, laments of language and media failure in Fez have focused not just on social relations that used to be and have been lost but also on what ought to be and had yet to be realized. Such laments have transpired in a range of communication channels, from objects such as devotional prayer beads and remote controls; to interactional forms such as storytelling, dress styles, and orthography; to media platforms like television news, religious stations, or WhatsApp group chats.

Channeling Moroccanness examines these laments as ways of speaking that created Moroccanness, the feeling of participating in the ongoing formations of Moroccan relationality. Rather than furthering the discourse about Morocco’s conflict between liberal secularists and religious conservatives, this ethnography shows the subtle range of ideologies and practices evoked in Fassi homes to calibrate Moroccan sociality and political consciousness.

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Price: $39.00
Pages: 240
Publisher: Fordham University Press
Imprint: Fordham University Press
Publication Date: 01 December 2020
Trim Size: 9.00 X 6.00 in
ISBN: 9780823289721
Format: Paperback
BISACs:

SOCIAL SCIENCE / Anthropology / Cultural & Social, RELIGION / Islam / Rituals & Practice, LANGUAGE ARTS & DISCIPLINES / Linguistics / Sociolinguistics

In Channeling Moroccanness, Becky Schulthies challenges anthropological linguistics by pushing beyond the speech event to different contexts of speaking, listening, and viewing to come up with what she calls a ‘calibration’ of Moroccan sociality. The book is an important and distinctive contribution to the ethnography of Morocco.---Steven Caton, Harvard University
Becky Schulthies is Associate Professor of Anthropology at Rutgers University.

Note on Transcription and Translation | ix

Introduction: Moroccan Channels, Channeling Moroccanness | 1

1 A Fassi Linguascape | 37

2 Literate Listening: Broadcast News and Ideologies of Reasoning | 43

3 Reregistering Media and Remediating a Register: Moroccan Morality Tales | 73

4 Scripting Sounds and Sounding Scripts: Senses, Channels, and Their Discontents | 102

5 Mediating Moroccan Muslims | 137

Conclusion: Opening and Closing the Channels | 169

Appendixes | 175

Acknowledgments | 189

Notes | 191

Bibliography | 203

Index | 219