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‘Don't Throw Yourself Away to the Dark Continent’: Shi'i Migration to West Africa and the Hierarchies of Exclusion in Lebanese Culture
Author(s) -
Weiss Max
Publication year - 2007
Publication title -
studies in ethnicity and nationalism
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.204
H-Index - 8
eISSN - 1754-9469
pISSN - 1473-8481
DOI - 10.1111/j.1754-9469.2007.tb00107.x
Subject(s) - diaspora , homeland , colonialism , identity (music) , consciousness , history , narrative , gender studies , ethnology , ancient history , anthropology , sociology , political science , literature , art , aesthetics , law , politics , archaeology , philosophy , epistemology
The Shi'i Lebanese diaspora in West Africa has played a key role in the construction of Lebanese Shi'i sectarian identity in the Twentieth century. This article provides some perspective and insight on the relationships among race, sect and colonialism in Africa and the Middle East through the lens of transnational Shi'i networks. Travel narratives written by Lebanese Shi'is who visited French West Africa during the 1930s indicate certain cultural hierarchies and racial modes of thinking. Moreover, some Lebanese internalised elements of colonial discourse while others, in a kind of inversion, re‐deployed them towards black Africans. These Lebanese travel diaries, therefore, constitute a unique primary source for the history of the Lebanese Shi'i mahjar (diaspora) in West Africa and its relationship with the watan (homeland); they also illuminate cultural hierarchies embedded in Shi'i consciousness. Such stereotypes about Africa have persisted well into the late 20th‐ and early 21st‐century in Lebanon.

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