Between Homeland and Exile: Poetry, Memory, and Identity in Sahrawi Communities
Sahrawi communities in the Western Saharan region of northwest Africa have experienced a series of radical shifts over the past century from decentralized nomadic tribal organization to colonial rule under the Spanish Sahara (1884-1975) and annexation by Morocco and Mauritania in 1975. The internat...
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ndltd-arizona.edu-oai-arizona.openrepository.com-10150-1460672015-10-23T04:27:39Z Between Homeland and Exile: Poetry, Memory, and Identity in Sahrawi Communities Deubel, Tara Flynn Park, Thomas K. Baro, Mamadou A. Park, Thomas K. Baro, Mamadou A. Alonso, Ana Maria Betteridge, Anne H. Boum, Aomar Clancy-Smith, Julia A. Hassaniyya Arabic Morocco North Africa oral literature Sahrawi Western Sahara Sahrawi communities in the Western Saharan region of northwest Africa have experienced a series of radical shifts over the past century from decentralized nomadic tribal organization to colonial rule under the Spanish Sahara (1884-1975) and annexation by Morocco and Mauritania in 1975. The international dispute over the future of the Western Sahara remains unresolved between the Moroccan government that administers the territory and the Sahrawi opposition that seeks self-determination under the leadership of the Polisario Front. In this context, this dissertation explores the lived experience and social memory of Sahrawis affected by conflict, diaspora, and urbanization over the past thirty-five years by examining multivocal expressions of ethnic and gender identity, nationalism, and citizenship in personal narratives and oral poetry in Hassaniyya Arabic. Through modes of everyday speech and verbal performances, Sahrawis living in the undisputed region of Morocco and the disputed Western Sahara exhibit varying political allegiances linked to tribal and national affiliations and political economic factors. Pro-independence activists negotiate public and clandestine aspirations for an independent state with the realities of living under Moroccan administration while refugees in Algeria employ performance genres to appeal for political and humanitarian support in the international community and maintain communication in the Sahrawi diaspora. Intergenerational perspectives between Sahrawis born before and after the 1975 cleavage reveal key divergences between the older generation that retains an active memory of nomadic livelihoods and pre-national tribal organization, the middle generation affected by a massive shift to urban residence and compulsory postcolonial nationalism, and the younger generation raised primarily in urban environments and refugee camps. Across generations, Sahrawi women have retained a prominent role in maintaining tribal and family ties and serving as leaders in nationalist and social movements. 2010 text Electronic Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/10150/146067 659753787 10871 en Copyright © is held by the author. Digital access to this material is made possible by the University Libraries, University of Arizona. Further transmission, reproduction or presentation (such as public display or performance) of protected items is prohibited except with permission of the author. The University of Arizona. |
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en |
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Hassaniyya Arabic Morocco North Africa oral literature Sahrawi Western Sahara |
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Hassaniyya Arabic Morocco North Africa oral literature Sahrawi Western Sahara Deubel, Tara Flynn Between Homeland and Exile: Poetry, Memory, and Identity in Sahrawi Communities |
description |
Sahrawi communities in the Western Saharan region of northwest Africa have experienced a series of radical shifts over the past century from decentralized nomadic tribal organization to colonial rule under the Spanish Sahara (1884-1975) and annexation by Morocco and Mauritania in 1975. The international dispute over the future of the Western Sahara remains unresolved between the Moroccan government that administers the territory and the Sahrawi opposition that seeks self-determination under the leadership of the Polisario Front. In this context, this dissertation explores the lived experience and social memory of Sahrawis affected by conflict, diaspora, and urbanization over the past thirty-five years by examining multivocal expressions of ethnic and gender identity, nationalism, and citizenship in personal narratives and oral poetry in Hassaniyya Arabic. Through modes of everyday speech and verbal performances, Sahrawis living in the undisputed region of Morocco and the disputed Western Sahara exhibit varying political allegiances linked to tribal and national affiliations and political economic factors. Pro-independence activists negotiate public and clandestine aspirations for an independent state with the realities of living under Moroccan administration while refugees in Algeria employ performance genres to appeal for political and humanitarian support in the international community and maintain communication in the Sahrawi diaspora. Intergenerational perspectives between Sahrawis born before and after the 1975 cleavage reveal key divergences between the older generation that retains an active memory of nomadic livelihoods and pre-national tribal organization, the middle generation affected by a massive shift to urban residence and compulsory postcolonial nationalism, and the younger generation raised primarily in urban environments and refugee camps. Across generations, Sahrawi women have retained a prominent role in maintaining tribal and family ties and serving as leaders in nationalist and social movements. |
author2 |
Park, Thomas K. |
author_facet |
Park, Thomas K. Deubel, Tara Flynn |
author |
Deubel, Tara Flynn |
author_sort |
Deubel, Tara Flynn |
title |
Between Homeland and Exile: Poetry, Memory, and Identity in Sahrawi Communities |
title_short |
Between Homeland and Exile: Poetry, Memory, and Identity in Sahrawi Communities |
title_full |
Between Homeland and Exile: Poetry, Memory, and Identity in Sahrawi Communities |
title_fullStr |
Between Homeland and Exile: Poetry, Memory, and Identity in Sahrawi Communities |
title_full_unstemmed |
Between Homeland and Exile: Poetry, Memory, and Identity in Sahrawi Communities |
title_sort |
between homeland and exile: poetry, memory, and identity in sahrawi communities |
publisher |
The University of Arizona. |
publishDate |
2010 |
url |
http://hdl.handle.net/10150/146067 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT deubeltaraflynn betweenhomelandandexilepoetrymemoryandidentityinsahrawicommunities |
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1718097001311109120 |