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Colonial Encountersin Gendered Settings: Reflections on Mrīrīda nʾait ʿAtiq,a Moroccan Amazīgh Courtesanand Singing Poet

    1. [1] Hassan II University of Casablanca, Morocco
  • Localización: Narratives of violence / coord. por Teresa Iribarren i Donadeu, Roger Canadell, Josep-Anton Fernàndez Montolí, 2021, ISBN 978-88-6969-460-8, págs. 14-31
  • Idioma: inglés
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    • t Mrīrīda nʾait ʿAtiq, or Mrīrīda ūt-ʿAtiq as she is locally known, is an Amazīghpopular troubadour who has been brought to oblivion by historiography writings. Shewas a courtesan and a traveling poet whose physical wanderings in the mountainousvillages and valleys of Tasāout and Azilal are retold in her oral and aural poetry. Curiously,the often-scornful audiences in the public markets (souks) where she performed nevergot interested in Mrīrīda’s poems until she met with a French instructor who spoke thelocal dialect, taped the poems, translated them in French and documented them in LesChants de la Tassaout.


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