1st Edition

Guns, Culture and Moors Racial Perceptions, Cultural Impact and the Moroccan Participation in the Spanish Civil War (1936-1939)

By Ali Al Tuma Copyright 2018
    278 Pages
    by Routledge

    278 Pages 22 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    The history of the Moroccan troops in the Spanish Civil War (1936–1939) is the story of an encounter between two culturally and ethnically different people, and the attempts by both sides, Moroccan and Spanish, to take control of this contact. This book shows to what extent colonials could participate in negotiating limits and taboos rather than being only on the receiving end of them. The examination of this encounter, in its military, religious, as well as sexual aspects, sheds new light on colonial relations, and on how unique or typical the Spanish colonial case is in comparison to other European ones.

    Introduction



    Part I: Combat and life in the army 



    1. A military overview of the Spanish Civil War and the role of the Moroccan troops  



    2. The Moroccans on the battlefield 



    3. The Moroccan and his army 



    Part II: Women and religion: the Moroccans and Spanish society 



    4. Victims, wives and concubines: relations between Moroccan troops and Spanish women 



    5. Moros y Cristianos: religious aspects of the participation of Moroccan soldiers in the war



    Part III: The Moroccan as enemy, the Moroccan as ‘Brother’ 



    6. The Republic and the Moroccans 



    7. To be Spanish, to be Moroccan 



    Conclusions 



    Appendices

    Biography

    Ali Al Tuma is a JSPS fellow at the United Nations University in Tokyo, and was a faculty member at Leiden University.