Mazaltob - Sephardi Women in Translation

Book Talk

Date: Thursday, March 28, 2024, 6:30 PM - 8:00 PM

Where: The Vilna Shul, 18 Phillips St. Boston MA 02114 [view map]

Mazaltob

Join us for a book launch celebration and discussion featuring translators/editors Frances Malino and Yaëlle Azagury and moderated by Jonathan Decter.

Mazaltob, by Blanche Bendahan, is a fascinating portrait of a young Moroccan Sephardi woman as she navigates the ever-shifting ground between tradition and modernity, East and West, self and other, obligation and desire. Stylistically bold, culturally rich, by turns comic and wrenching, this polyphonic novel is both historically important and, in its new translation, a gift for our times.

"Bendahan’s masterpiece, a stunning exploration of Jewishness, feminism, and modernity in Morocco, deserves to be read far and wide. Malino’s excellent biographical introduction and Azagury’s fascinating literary analysis beautifully frame their translation. A delight and a triumph!"

Jessica M. Marglin, Professor of Religion, Law and History and Ruth Ziegler Chair in Jewish Studies, USC
Francis

Frances Malino is the Sophia Moses Robison Professor Emerita of Jewish Studies and History at Wellesley College. She is author of The Sephardic Jews of Bordeaux: Assimilation and Emancipation in Revolutionary and Napoleonic France (1978) and A Jew in the French Revolution: The Life of Zalkind Hourwitz (1996) and co-editor of Essays in Modern Jewish History: a Tribute to Ben Halpern (1982), The Jews in Modern France (1985), Profiles in Diversity: Jews in a Changing Europe (1998), and Voices of the Diaspora: Jewish Women Writing in the New Europe (2005). Recipient of numerous awards and fellowships she was named Chevalier dans l’Ordre des Palmes académiques by the French Ministry of Education in 2012.   

Yaelle

Dr. Yaëlle Azagury is a writer, literary scholar, and critic. She has taught at Barnard College and Columbia University. She contributed essays and scholarly articles for Women Writing Africa (Feminist Press, 2008), Rethinking Jewish Culture and Society in North Africa and the Middle East (Indiana University Press, 2011) and other works. Her criticism has appeared in the New York Times, the Washington Post, the Jerusalem Report, and Lilith.  A native of Tangier, Morocco, she hold degrees from the Université Sorbonne-Nouvelle, the Institut d’Etudes Politiques in Paris, and Columbia University. 

Jonathan

Jonathan Decter is the Edmond J. Safra Professor of Sephardic Studies at Brandeis University. His research focuses on Jews in the Islamic World, Spain, and the broader Mediterranean during the medieval period, and in Sephardic Studies more generally.

Professor Decter’s most recent book, Dominion Built of Praise: Panegyric and Legitimacy among Jews in the Medieval Mediterranean, is the winner of the National Jewish Book Award in Sephardic Culture for 2018.  His first book, Iberian Jewish Literature: Between al-Andalus and Christian Europe, was awarded the Salo W. Baron prize for best first book in Jewish Studies in 2008. He is also the co-editor of three edited volumes and an editor of the Journal of the Intellectual History of the Islamicate World.

Blanche

Blanche Bendahan (née Benoliel) was born in Oran, Algeria on November 26, 1893, to a Jewish family of Moroccan-Spanish origin. Shortly after her birth, her family moved to France, where she was educated in the French system. Bendahan published her first collection of poetry, La voile sur l’eau, in 1926 and then her first novel, Mazaltob, in 1930. Mazaltob, which won an award from the Académie Française, portrays a North African woman in Tetouan, Morocco, and the oppression to which she is subjected by the patriarchal society in which she lives.

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Information on getting to The Vilna Shul [view map]