Between 1963 and 1986, eminent American anthropologists Clifford
and Hildred Geertz - together and alone - conducted ethnographic
fieldwork for varying periods in Sefrou, a town situated in
north-central Morocco, south of Fez. This book considers Geertz's
contributions to sociocultural theory and symbolic
anthropology.
Clifford Geertz made an immense impact on the American academy:
his interpretative and symbolic approaches reoriented anthropology
analytically away from classic social science presuppositions,
while his publications profoundly influenced both North American
and Maghribi researchers alike. After his death at the age of 80 on
October 30, 2006, scholars from local, national, and international
universities gathered at the University of California, Los Angeles,
to analyze his contributions to sociocultural theory and symbolic
anthropology in relation to Islam; ideas of the sacred; Morocco's
cityscapes (notably Sefrou's bazaar or suq); colonialism and
post-independence economic development; gender, and political
structures at the household and village levels.
This book looks back to a specific era of American anthropology
beginning in the 1960s as it unfolded in Morocco; and at the same
time, the contributions examine new lines of enquiry that opened up
after key texts by Geertz were translated into French and
introduced to generations of francophone Maghribi researchers who
sustain lively and inventive meditations on his Morocco
writings.
This book was published as a special issue of Journal of North
African Studies.
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