We found a match
Your institution may have access to this item. Find your institution then sign in to continue.
- Title
Scholarship on Moroccan Jews in Canada: Multidisciplinary, Multilingual, and Diasporic.
- Authors
COHEN, YOLANDE; SCHWARTZ, STEPHANIE TARA
- Abstract
A historiography on Moroccan Jews in Canada (1960-2015) offers an exemplary case study of conducting comprehensive research on religious and ethnic minorities within a Canadian national framework. To find literature on this community, one must take a multinational, multidisciplinary, and multilingual approach. This mirrors the diasporic reality of Moroccan Jews, themselves dispersed from Morocco to Israel, France, Canada, and beyond. Scholarship on Moroccan Jews in Canada must cross the linguistic divides of Quebec and Ontario, as the majority francophone, but also Spanish- and Judeo-Arabic-speaking, population settled predominantly in Montreal followed by Toronto. In an attempt to examine Moroccan Jews as part of Canadian and Quebec history, the authors examined over 130 articles for this study--mostly regarding Moroccan Jews in Montreal, but these also included some key works in Canadian Jewish studies and Quebec studies. In what follows, we analyze the chronology of these works in relation to broader trends in Canadian Jewish studies and Quebec studies. The trends in the growth of studies on Moroccan Jews in Canada have been divided into roughly four overlapping periods: immigration and integration (1960s to 1970s); recognition and rapprochement (1980s); multiculturalism, interculturalism, and the production of ethnicity (1990s); and memory, identity, and religion (2000s to present).
- Subjects
CANADA; MOROCCAN Jews; JEWS; MULTILINGUALISM; JEWISH diaspora; RELIGIOUS minorities; FRENCH-speaking people; JUDEO-Arabic language; LANGUAGE &; history; HISTORY; JEWISH history
- Publication
Journal of Canadian Studies, 2016, Vol 50, Issue 3, p592
- ISSN
0021-9495
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.3138/jcs.50.3.592