The Mediterranean Incarnate
Region Formation between Sicily and Tunisia since World War II
The Mediterranean Incarnate
Region Formation between Sicily and Tunisia since World War II
The book centers on the town of Mazara del Vallo, located on the southwestern tip of Sicily some ninety nautical miles northeast of the African shore. Ben-Yehoyada intertwines the town’s recent turbulent history—which has been fraught with conflicts over fishing rights, development projects, and how the Mediterranean should figure in Italian politics at large—with deep accounts of life aboard the Naumacho, linking ethnography with historical anthropology and political-economic analysis. Through this sophisticated approach, he crafts a new viewpoint on the historical processes of transnational region formation, one offered by these moving ships as they weave together new social and political constellations.
288 pages | 21 halftones | 6 x 9 | © 2017
Anthropology: Cultural and Social Anthropology
Geography: Cultural and Historical Geography, Social and Political Geography
Reviews
Table of Contents
ONE / Introduction
TWO / Whose Strike Is It?
THREE / The Craft of Expansive Navigation
FOUR / Fish and Bait
FIVE / One Big Family
SIX / Pissing Rage
SEVEN / Terms of Transcultural Affinity
Conclusion: Mediterranean Afterlife of a Dying Fishing Town
Notes
References
Index
Awards
Department of Anthropology, William and Mary: Vinson Sutlive Book Prize in Historical Anthropology
Won
Society for the Anthropology of Europe: William A. Douglass Prize in Europeanist Anthropology
Honorable Mention
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