We Share Walls: Language, Land, and Gender in Berber MoroccoWe Share Walls: Language, Land, and Gender in Berber Morocco explores how political economic shifts over the last century have reshaped the language practices and ideologies of women (and men) in the plains and mountains of rural Morocco.
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From inside the book
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Page 121
... amarg amarg ay , " linking homeland ( tamazirt ) and music / mood / longing ( amarg ) . Stringing these two concepts together was telling , because the tamazirt was precisely a place of amarg , of music and nostalgia . Each person ...
... amarg amarg ay , " linking homeland ( tamazirt ) and music / mood / longing ( amarg ) . Stringing these two concepts together was telling , because the tamazirt was precisely a place of amarg , of music and nostalgia . Each person ...
Page 128
... amarg , why are you still concerned with it ? The song format is conventionally framed in both its opening and its closing . Ben Wakrim opens the song with a standard supplication to God for goodness and peace . He closes with a plea to ...
... amarg , why are you still concerned with it ? The song format is conventionally framed in both its opening and its closing . Ben Wakrim opens the song with a standard supplication to God for goodness and peace . He closes with a plea to ...
Page 139
... amarg of the tamazirt as in the men's song . There were certainly aspects of rural life that women preferred to what they heard or saw about city life . What they wanted was to take the good and be rid of the bad . Women conducted their ...
... amarg of the tamazirt as in the men's song . There were certainly aspects of rural life that women preferred to what they heard or saw about city life . What they wanted was to take the good and be rid of the bad . Women conducted their ...
Other editions - View all
We Share Walls: Language, Land, and Gender in Berber Morocco Katherine E. Hoffman Limited preview - 2008 |
We Share Walls: Language, Land, and Gender in Berber Morocco Katherine E. Hoffman No preview available - 2008 |
Common terms and phrases
Agadir agricultural agwal amarg Amazigh Amazigh language Anti-Atlas mountains Arabic-speaking Arazan Arghen Ashelhi assimilated Aznag Berber Berber language bilingual bride Casablanca cassette Chapter code-switching collective contrast countryside discourse dwellers economic Endangered Languages ethnic ethnographic ethnolinguistic everyday Fatima female fieldwork French Ftuma gender genres girls Hajja Hassan High Atlas Hoffman homeland Ida ou Zeddout identity Igherm indigenous Khadduj labor land language ideologies language shift lexical linguistic listeners live makhzen male Marrakesh migrant monolingual moral Moroccan Arabic Morocco native performance plains Ishelhin political economy programming Protectorate purist Rabat region residents rural Saadia singing social song Sous plains Sous Valley speak Tashelhit speech sung symbolic Tafraout talk Tamazight tamazirt tammara Tarifit Taroudant Tash Tashelhit language Tashelhit radio Tashelhit speakers Tashelhit-speaking term timizar tion tizrrarin towns Transcript urban verbal expressive vernacular verses village Wakrim wedding woman words young emigrant young women zerda