Tales_of_Joujouka

<i>Tales of Joujouka</i>

Tales of Joujouka

Add article description


Tales of Joujouka is a book by the Moroccan painter Mohamed Hamri (1932–2000) containing eight stories featuring the legends, folklore and Sufi origins myths and rituals of the Master Musicians of Joujouka. These are the stories and legends of Hamri's native village of Joujouka or Jajouka in Morocco, famous for its connections with the Beat Generation and Brian Jones, founder of the Rolling Stones.

Quick Facts Author, Translator ...

The Book

Tales of Joujouka was first published in 1975 by the Capra Press in Santa Barbara, California. The editor was Edouard Roditi.[1] It was the last of thirty five chapbooks in a series which also included Anaïs Nin, Raymond Carver, Lawrence Durrell and Henry Miller. (The chapbook series actually had 41 titles in the series.) Hamri was the only Moroccan published in the series.[1] It is a collection of the tales and legends of the village of Jajouka and its musicians, the Master Musicians of Joujouka. The book includes "The Legend of Boujeloud" which relates the origin myth for the Master Musicians of Joujouka and their association with the deity Pan. The story "The Cultivator with Lions and Healer of Crazy Minds" is an account of Sidi Ahmed Scheich's first encounter with the musicians ancestors c. 800 AD. He is the Sufi saint who founded the village. Translation from the original Maghrebi is by Blanca Nyland.[1]

Limited Edition

The original edition was printed with a card cover. Fifty numbered and signed hardbound copies were also published in 1975.[2]

New Edition

In 2003 The Black Eagle Press in Tangier Morocco produced a new edition of the book which contained an introduction and three extra tales.[3]

ISBN

  • 0-88496-043-9 hbk.
  • 0-88496-044-7 pbk.
  • 0-9523838-8-8 (2003 edition)

See also


References

  1. Hamri, Mohamed, Tales of Joujouka. Santa Barbara:Capra Press, 1975
  2. Hamri,Mohamed, Tales of Joujouka. Hardback limited signed edition, Santa Barbara: Capra Press, 1975
  3. Hamri, Mohamed, Tales of Joujouka. Tangier: Black Eagle Press, 2003

Share this article:

This article uses material from the Wikipedia article Tales_of_Joujouka, and is written by contributors. Text is available under a CC BY-SA 4.0 International License; additional terms may apply. Images, videos and audio are available under their respective licenses.