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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Samuel Sami Everett , Rebekah VincePublisher: Liverpool University Press Imprint: Liverpool University Press Volume: 11 ISBN: 9781837644193ISBN 10: 1837644195 Pages: 348 Publication Date: 01 October 2023 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print ![]() This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of ContentsReviews"""This collection dances off the page, with a series of engaging, accessible, insightful essays on the many ways in which Jewish and Muslim artists and performers from North Africa engaged (and continue to engage) with one another creatively, through comedy, art, film, theater, and music, from the colonial period to the present day."" Sarah Abrevaya Stein, UCLA ""Excellent ouvrage appelé à faire date. Savamment argumenté et novateur, il bouscule intelligemment des schèmes et des préjugés fossilisés. Les éclairages qu'il apporte sur les relations entre Juifs et Musulmans, oubliées ou occultées, sont pertinents et vivifiants. La mise en évidence, solidement argumentée et nuancée, de leurs affinités artistiques, culturelles et autres, va à contre-courant de l'approche conflictuelle habituelle de leurs interactions. Ce livre a l'immense mérite de sortir des sentiers battus et d'ouvrir de stimulantes perspectives de recherches. A l'ère des extrêmes et du déferlement du populisme, sa lecture s'impose absolument."" - Mohammed Kenbib, Université Mohammed V de Rabat [Original quote] ""A landmark volume that skilfully and innovatively disrupts fossilized schemas and prejudices through its arguments. The insights that it brings to bear on Jewish-Muslim relations, hitherto obfuscated or forgotten, are pertinent and restorative. Its elucidation of artistic and cultural affinities, convincingly argued and with great nuance, serves as a counterpoint to the more commonplace narrative of conflict when it comes to such interactions. This book is particularly noteworthy as it takes us off the beaten track and opens up stimulating avenues for research. In an era of extremes and a surge in populism it is a must read."" - Mohammed Kenbib, Université Mohammed V de Rabat [English translation] ""Quand les arts et la création artistique racontent les relations des juifs et des musulmans, ils offrent, alors, au lecteur les échos vibrants d'une histoire partagée dont les héritages résonnent encore aujourd'hui. C'est le défi relevé par les auteurs de cet ouvrage, affranchis des paradigmes politiques et idéologiques, et qui entre passé et présent renouent avec une histoire qui n'existe plus."" - Karima Dirèche, CNRS TELEMME [Original quote] ""When the creative and performing arts recount relations between Jews and Muslims, they offer to the reader vibrant echoes of a shared history whose legacies continue to resound today. Such is the challenge taken up by the authors of this volume who, free from political and ideological paradigms, reconnect with a forgotten history, somewhere between past and present."" - Karima Dirèche, CNRS TELEMME [English translation] ""A fascinating, eminently readable collection of essays documenting the dynamic, creative, and surprisingly close collaboration between Muslims and Jews in all domains of the performing arts in the Maghreb and in France from the 1920s to the contemporary post-independence period. In this collection, we encounter a colourful gallery of artists, authors, producers – both Muslims and Jews – who together entertained generations of mixed audiences with theatre plays in vernacular Arabic, cabaret performances, concerts, films, and comic one-man shows. This volume offers us a welcome and timely antidote to the feeling of complete deterioration of the relations between Jews and Muslims in recent decades."" Professor Lucette Valensi, École des hautes études en sciences sociales 'In brief, this is an exciting and much needed contribution to intercommunal religious studies in North Africa and France. …Scholars in art, music, theater and film will undoubtedly applaud the incontestable demonstration that the arts deeply matter in history and geopolitics.' Tamara Dee Turner, The Journal of North African Studies" Author InformationSamuel Sami Everett is a Research Fellow at the University of Cambridge. Rebekah Vince is a Lecturer in French at Queen Mary University of London. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |