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Diasporic Mobilities on Vacation is a nuanced exploration of the
embodied and affective practices of Moroccans from Europe visiting
Morocco for summer vacation. Rather than characterizing them as
uncomfortably split between homelands, this book focuses on how
their touristic leisure practices create their own space of
diasporic belonging. An expert on Moroccan diaspora communities and
mobile lifestyles, the book draws on multi-sited and mobile
ethnographic research to take the reader along on the journey
'home' and experience the daily lives of diasporic visitors. Their
practices, activities, and encounters on vacation offer insights
into larger issues of class, leisure consumption, and transnational
belonging in South-to-North migration contexts. Concretely, the
book shows how these holiday encounters simultaneously generate
integration into Morocco for migrant descendants who can feel at
'home' in this homeland, and differentiation from others in how
they embody 'Moroccaness' as social and material actors. This book
shows how seemingly frivolous practices of leisure have material
consequences for individuals who belong across homelands.
Positioned at the intersection of migration studies, leisure and
tourism mobilities, and ethnomethodology and practice theory, this
book is a worthwhile read for scholars and students-indeed, anyone
questioning or experiencing problems of belonging in transnational
and diasporic contexts.
Questions persist about post-migrant generations and their sense of
belonging in one homeland or another. As descendants of migrants,
‘second’ and further generations often struggle to establish an
unproblematic belonging in/to a resident homeland, as the place
where they live and work but are often categorized as
‘outsiders’. Simultaneously, because of improving access to
travel, they can also maintain a physical presence in an ancestral
homeland. However, their encounters there may also problematize
their sense of belonging. During their summertime visits to
Morocco, the European-Moroccan participants in this ethnography
repeatedly find themselves negotiating a sense of belonging in the
‘homeland’. This book analyzes how these negotiations take
place in order to investigate how the categories of ‘diasporic’
and ‘Moroccan’ become shaped by the interactional encounters
observed. In the setting of Morocco, where trajectories to and from
Europe have colored several centuries of history, this book
provides a framework to explore how migration and return become
incorporated into contemporary ‘Moroccanness’.
Morocco has long been a mythic land, firmly rooted in the European
colonial imagination. For more than a century it has been
appropriated by travellers, explorers, writers and artists. It is
just these images and imaginings that are now being reconstructed
for nostalgic consumption. In Moroccan Dreams, Claudio Minca
examines this aestheticised re-enactment of the colonial, exploring
the ways in which Moroccans themselves have become complicit in the
re-writing of their homes and lives. Richly illustrated, the book
provides a fascinating journey that will engage and delight all
those enamoured of Morocco and its extraordinary geographies.
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Apricity (Paperback)
Lauren Wagner
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R498
R408
Discovery Miles 4 080
Save R90 (18%)
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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