The Mexican Mahjar: Transnational Maronites, Jews, and Arabs under the French Mandate

The Mexican Mahjar: Transnational Maronites, Jews, and Arabs under the French Mandate

by Camila Pastor
The Mexican Mahjar: Transnational Maronites, Jews, and Arabs under the French Mandate

The Mexican Mahjar: Transnational Maronites, Jews, and Arabs under the French Mandate

by Camila Pastor

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Overview

This prize-winning study of Levantine migration to Mexico brings “a new and revelatory light” to the subject (Christina Civantos, author of Between Argentines and Arabs).

In the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, migration from the Middle East brought hundreds of thousands of people to the Americas. After a pause during World War I, this intense mobility resumed in the 1920s and continued through the 1940s under the French Mandate. A significant number of these migrants settled in Mexico, building transnational lives.

The Mexican Mahjar provides the first global history of Middle Eastern migrations to Mexico. Making unprecedented use of French colonial archives and historical ethnography, Camila Pastor examines how French control over Syria and Lebanon affected the migrants. This study explores issues of class, race, and gender through the decades of increased immigration to Mexico, looking at narratives created by the migrants themselves.

Pastor sheds new light on the creation of transnational networks at the intersection of Arab, French, and Mexican colonial modernisms. Revealing how migrants experienced mobility as conquest, diaspora, exile, or pilgrimage, The Mexican Mahjar tracks global history on an intimate scale.

Winner of the 2018 Khayrallah Prize in Migration Studies

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781477314647
Publisher: University of Texas Press
Publication date: 02/24/2022
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 352
File size: 7 MB

About the Author

A historical anthropologist exploring transnationalism, mediation, and subalterns in colonial settings, Camila Pastor is a profesor investigador in the División de Historia of the Centro de Investigación y Docencia Económicas.

Table of Contents

  • Illustrations and Tables
  • Acknowledgments
  • Introduction
  • Chapter 1. The Mexican Mahjar
  • Chapter 2. Managing Mobility
  • Chapter 3. Race and Patronage
  • Chapter 4. Migrants and the Law
  • Chapter 5. Modernism
  • Chapter 6. Making the Mahjar Lebanese
  • Chapter 7. Objects of Memory
  • Chapter 8. The Arab and Its Double
  • Conclusion
  • Notes
  • Bibliography
  • Index

What People are Saying About This

Leonardo Schiocchet

This book is a significant contribution to the field because it goes against assumptions engrained in much of the literature. It analyses new data in light of a contemporary revisionist perspective that has recently been challenging the established canon. Thus, not only is the book’s new Mexican-Lebanese material relevant, but its perspective represents the vanguard and will become an important reference in the years to come.

Christina Civantos

A ground-breaking work that presents the social configuration of Arabic-speaking migrants and their descendants in a new and revelatory light. This study stands to be an excellent example of a global, connected colonial approach to migration and nationalism. It reconfigures Latin American and Middle Eastern studies in a sound and compelling way, highlighting the ways in which Mexico and the Levant participate in, and interact with, the same structures of power.

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