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Orphans of Islam portrays the abject lives and 'excluded body' of
abandoned and bastard children in contemporary Morocco, while
critiquing the concept and practice of 'adoption, ' which too often
is considered a panacea. Through a close and historically grounded
reading of legal, social, and cultural mechanisms of one
predominantly Islamic country, Jamila Bargach shows how 'the
surplus bastard body' is created by mainstream society. Written in
part from the perspectives of the children and single mothers,
intermittently from the view of 'adopting' families, and employing
bastardy as a haunting and empowering motif with a potentially
subversive edge, this ethnography is composed as an intricate,
open-ended, and arabesque-like evocation of Moroccan society and
its state institutions. It equally challenges received sociological
and anthropological tropes and understandings of the Arab world
What need is there for kinship? What good is it anyway? The
questions are as old as anthropology itself, but few answers have
been enduringly persuasive. Kinship systems can contribute to our
enslavement, but more often they permit, channel, and facilitate
our relations with others and our further fashioning of
ourselves--as kin but also as subjects of other kinds. When they
do, they are among the matrices of our lives as ethical beings.
Each contributor to this innovative book treats his or her own
alterity as the touchstone of the exploration of an
ethnographically and historically specific ethics of kinship.
Together, the chapters reveal the irreducible complexity of the
entanglement of the subject of kinship with the subject of nation,
class, ethnicity, gender, desire. The chapters speak eloquently to
the sometimes liberating stories that we cannot help but keep
telling about our kin and ourselves.
Encountering Morocco introduces readers to life in this North
African country through vivid accounts of fieldwork as personal
experience and intellectual journey. We meet the contributors at
diverse stages of their careers-from the unmarried researcher
arriving for her first stint in the field to the seasoned
fieldworker returning with spouse and children. They offer frank
descriptions of what it means to take up residence in a place where
one is regarded as an outsider, learn the language and local
customs, and struggle to develop rapport. Moving reflections on
friendship, kinship, and belief within the cross-cultural encounter
reveal why study of Moroccan society has played such a seminal role
in the development of cultural anthropology. -- Indiana University
Press
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