M’addib s and Migrant Laborers: Migration from Ottoman Trablus al-Gharb to Djerba, Tunisia in the Early 20th Century

Type de ressource
Auteur/contributeur
Titre
M’addib s and Migrant Laborers: Migration from Ottoman Trablus al-Gharb to Djerba, Tunisia in the Early 20th Century
Résumé
This article follows the history of migration from the mountain villages of the Jebel Nafusa in Ottoman Trablus al-Gharb (in today’s northwestern Libya) to the southern Tunisian island of Djerba in the early 20th century. It situates this local history of migration within the broader framework of Maghribi migration both before and during the colonial era in Libya (1911–43), while tracing the histories of two categories of migrants, in particular, manual laborers and Qur’an teachers (m’addib-s). The article makes three claims: (1) Nafusi migration was as much the result of local historical circumstances as it was a response to colonialism; (2) the historical experience of migration of Nafusis differed according to social class; and (3) local circumstances shaped the dynamics of migrant integration in the Maghrib. In doing so, I demonstrate how Nafusi migration to Djerba both conforms to and diverges from the larger history of late Ottoman and colonial-era migration in Tunisia. By shifting the focus away from the colonial moment, I make the case for foregrounding longer-term regional connections and migrations that linked different spaces across the Maghrib and also attend to local histories and what they offer in the way of caveats and exceptions.
Publication
International Journal of Middle East Studies
Maison d’édition
Cambridge University Press
Lieu
Cambridge
Date
2025
Volume
57
Numéro
1
Pages
1-19
Abrév. de revue
Int. J. Middle East Stud.
Clé de citation
lovejrMaddibMigrantLaborers2025
Consulté le
07/08/2025 06:17
ISSN
0020-7438, 1471-6380
Titre abrégé
M’addib s and Migrant Laborers
Langue
eng
Référence
Love Jr, P. M. (2025). M’addib s and Migrant Laborers: Migration from Ottoman Trablus al-Gharb to Djerba, Tunisia in the Early 20th Century. International Journal of Middle East Studies, 57(1), 1‑19. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0020743825100810