Colonial al-Andalus: Spain and the Making of Modern Moroccan Culture

Colonial al-Andalus: Spain and the Making of Modern Moroccan Culture

by Eric Calderwood
Colonial al-Andalus: Spain and the Making of Modern Moroccan Culture

Colonial al-Andalus: Spain and the Making of Modern Moroccan Culture

by Eric Calderwood

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Overview

Through state-backed Catholicism, monolingualism, militarism, and dictatorship, Spain’s fascists earned their reputation for intolerance. It may therefore come as a surprise that 80,000 Moroccans fought at General Franco’s side in the 1930s. What brought these strange bedfellows together, Eric Calderwood argues, was a highly effective propaganda weapon: the legacy of medieval Muslim Iberia, known as al-Andalus. This legacy served to justify Spain’s colonization of Morocco and also to define the Moroccan national culture that supplanted colonial rule.

Writers of many political stripes have celebrated convivencia, the fabled “coexistence” of Christians, Muslims, and Jews in medieval Iberia. According to this widely-held view, modern Spain and Morocco are joined through their shared Andalusi past. Colonial al-Andalus traces this supposedly timeless narrative to the mid-1800s, when Spanish politicians and intellectuals first used it to press for Morocco’s colonization. Franco later harnessed convivencia to the benefit of Spain’s colonial program in Morocco. This shift precipitated an eloquent historical irony. As Moroccans embraced the Spanish insistence on Morocco’s Andalusi heritage, a Spanish idea about Morocco gradually became a Moroccan idea about Morocco.

Drawing on a rich archive of Spanish, Arabic, French, and Catalan sources—including literature, historiography, journalism, political speeches, schoolbooks, tourist brochures, and visual arts—Calderwood reconstructs the varied political career of convivencia and al-Andalus, showing how shared pasts become raw material for divergent contemporary ideologies, including Spanish fascism and Moroccan nationalism. Colonial al-Andalus exposes the limits of simplistic oppositions between European and Arab, Christian and Muslim, that shape current debates about European colonialism.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780674980327
Publisher: Harvard University Press
Publication date: 04/09/2018
Pages: 408
Product dimensions: 6.20(w) x 9.40(h) x 1.30(d)

About the Author

Eric Calderwood is Associate Professor of Comparative and World Literature at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign and the author of the award-winning Colonial al-Andalus. He is a contributor to NPR, the BBC, and Foreign Policy.

Table of Contents

Note on Transliteration vii

Introduction 1

1 Tetouan Is Granada 30

2 Al-Andalus and Moroccan Literary History 74

3 Al-Andalus, Andalucía, and Morocco 116

4 Franco's Hajj 142

5 The Invention of Hispano-Arab Culture 167

6 Moroccan Alhambras 208

7 The Daughter of Granada and Fez 251

Epilogue: The Afterlife of Colonial al-Andalus in Contemporary Morocco 286

Notes 301

Bibliography 349

Acknowledgments 377

Index 383

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