Maghrib in Past & Present | Podcasts
Education
Episode 75: The Husyanid Dynasty and Spatial Control and Judicial Control of the Enslaved Blacks of Tunis
In this podcast, Dr. Ismael Montana, Associate Professor of History at Northern Illinois University, discusses the impact of the Husaynid dynasty (1705-1957) on the enslaved Sudanic communities of Tunis. Montana does so by looking at the Stambali, a ritual of musical possession based on the fusion of the Hausa Bori cult and popular Islam, performed primarily by the Sudanic communities of Tunis.
He argues that the Husaynid dynasty actively sought to transform Sudanic communities into on of several corporatist communities in the Tunisian Beylic, by means of spatial control. In the early eighteenth century, the Husaynid Beys promoted the sainthood of Sidi Saad al-Abid, a former slave from Borno, in order to serve as a rallying figure for the freed and enslaved Sudanic communities that had been settled in Tunis as a result of the trans-Saharan slave trade. The Sufi brotherhood that formed around this saint was given a judicial-administrative apparatus, designed to self-regulate the community, and structure it within the state's religio-political scheme. Montana maintains that while the Sudani community entered the Husaynid political system via the Stambali, the processes by which that group was integrated relied on its specific religious culture, which continued to set them apart from the rest of Tunisian society.
Ismael Montana's research interests include the social and economic history of slavery, culture, and citizenship in Northwest Africa and the western Mediterranean basin from the 18th century to the present. He is currently the Vice-President of West Africa Research Association (WARA).
This podcast was recorded at the CEMAT Director’s Conference on “Narratives of Legitimacy and the Maghrebi State: Power, Law and Comparison” held on 21 June 2019 in Sidi Bou Said, Tunisia.
We thank Dr. Tamara Turner, Ethnomusicologist and Research Fellow at the Max Planck Institute for Human Development, Center for the History of Emotions, for her interpretation of Natiro/ Ya Joro, from the Hausa repertoire of diwan.
Edited and posted by Hayet Lansari, Librarian, Outreach Coordinator, Content Curator (CEMA).
Rencontre avec Denis Martinez, artiste plasticien et pédagogue. Un parcours en partage
Sur les manuscrits ibâdites des anciens “Siyar” et en particulier l’ouvrage de Shammâkhi (9e / 15e siècle)
Libya: Continuities and Discontinuities of Political Order After 2011
La dimension berbère dans les manuscrits arabes du Maghreb. Essai de lecture de quelques documents
الحدود المجتمعية: قراءة في أشكال التمزق ومقترح في سبل الاندماج
الديناميكية الحضرية والتحولات السوسيواقتصادية بالتجمعات الحدودية الواقعة على المحور برج باجي مختار- تمنارست
Description de quelques manuscrits mystico-religieux de Kabylie.
Ahmed Cherkaoui in Warsaw: Polish-Moroccan Artistic Relations during the Cold War, 1955-1980
Les significations profanes de la pandémie Covid-19 à Oran
Entretien avec Dr. Asma Nouira : Les relations entre l'État et la religion en Tunisie
À la découverte de copies manuscrites d'une même œuvre : Le 'Kitâb al-siyar' de Wisyânî, un auteur Ibâdite Nord-Africain du 6ème AH. / 12ème
Terra Incognita: Mapping the Afterlives of French Nuclear Imperialism in the Sahara
Non-State Actors and State-Building in Libya after 2011
Centralization and Decentralization in the Middle East and North Africa
Bread and Circuits: Illness, Food, and the Course of Empire in Algeria
Anti-Elitism in Tunisia: Condition of Political Success?
الشعبوية: قراءة حول المثال التونسي
Populism and the Crisis of the Republic
Jedba, Jinns, and Hāl: Bodily Modalities of Mental-Emotional Health and 'Musico-thérapie' in Algeria
Of Jinn Theory and Germ Theory: Translating Bacteriological Medicine and Islamic Law in Algeria
Create your
podcast in
minutes
It is Free
The No-Frills Teacher Podcast
Heal, Survive & Thrive!
Summarize | رادیو سامرایز
The Jordan B. Peterson Podcast
The Mel Robbins Podcast