Jonathan Glasser
Chair, Associate Professor
Office:
Washington Hall 122
Phone:
757-221-1058
Email:
[[jglasser]]
Areas of specialization:
History of anthropological theory; music and poetics; exchange and patrimony; Muslim-Jewish relations; language ideology; comparative colonialism; North Africa and the Middle East
Background
My work focuses on questions of patrimony, memory, expressive culture, and social difference in early modern and modern North Africa, with particular attention to Algeria and Morocco. My first book, The Lost Paradise: Andalusi Music in Urban North Africa (University of Chicago Press, 2016), explored the dynamics of revival and transmission in an urban performance practice in northwestern Algeria and eastern Morocco. I am currently finishing a book about Muslim-Jewish interactions around music and poetry in Algeria and its diaspora. I am also developing new projects about language ideological debates around Judeo-Arabic and about struggles over the meaning and uses of evolution in anthropological thought. I regularly teach courses on sociocultural theory, North Africa and the Middle East, language, and Muslim-Jewish relations.
Education
PhD University of Michigan 2008
Selected Publications
Judeo-Arabic Love Poems from the Western Mediterranean, 91心頭利 Libraries, September 2024, . Proceedings of the Paris Institute for Advanced Study, 21 (2024). . Turath 2(2023): 36-68. Special Issue on Musicology in/of the Maghrib in the Colonial Context: Revisiting Jules Rouanet, edited by Jonathan Glasser and Ahmed Amine Dellaï.
Le concert « algérien » de l’Exposition universelle de Paris de 1889 et la naissance de la scène de la musique arabe. In Juifs et Musulmans en France. De l’Empire à l’Hexagone (1860 à nos jours). Edited by Benjamin Stora, Karima Dirèche et Mathias Dreyfuss. Paris: Seuil, 2022.
Beyond the Borrowing Paradigm: Lessons from the Muslim-Jewish Maghrib. In Music and Encounter at the Mediterranean Crossroads: A Sea of Voices, ed. Ruth F. Davis and Brian Oberlander. Routledge, 2021.
. Hésperis-Tamuda, LV (4) (2020): 69-99.
Jewish-Muslim Research Network, September 3, 2020
. In Jewish-Muslim Interactions: Performing Cultures Between North Africa and France. Edited by Samuel Sami Everett and Rebekah Vince. Pp. 43-60. Liverpool: Liverpool University Press, 2020.
Interpretative Anthropology. International Encyclopedia of Anthropology. Edited by Hilary Callan. Hoboken: John Wiley and Sons, Ltd., 2018.
Special Issue Introduction: Inhabiting the Margins: Middle Eastern Minorities Revisited. Co-authored with Guldem Büyüksaraç. Anthropological Quarterly 90(1) 2017: 5-16.
The Lost Paradise: Andalusi Music in Urban North Africa. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2016.
Andalusi Musical Origins at the Moroccan-Algerian Frontier: Beyond Charter Myth. American Ethnologist 42(4) 2015: 720-733.