New Books in Communications

Noam Sienna, "Jewish Books in North Africa: Between the Early Modern and Modern Worlds" (Indiana UP, 2025)

Jan 12, 2026
Noam Sienna, a leading scholar of Jewish culture, explores the intricate world of Jewish books in North Africa. He reveals how these texts knitted together diverse Sephardic communities across regions like Fez, Tunis, and Livorno. Sienna highlights the shift from manuscripts to print, the evolving identity of Sephardic culture, and the often-overlooked labor of scribes and correctors. He also discusses the emotional significance of books post-expulsion and teases his upcoming project on Ottoman Sephardi printing, promising more fascinating insights into a rich cultural history.
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INSIGHT

Books As Social And Material Networks

  • Books functioned as social objects embedded in networks, not just texts to read.
  • Material features (paper, bindings, annotations) reveal production, circulation, and use across communities.
INSIGHT

Hybrid Manuscript–Print Practices

  • North African Jewish communities combined manuscript culture with wide access to print without local presses.
  • They copied printed books into manuscripts and imported printed works from Sephardi centers like Livorno.
INSIGHT

Maghreb As A Transnational Book Hub

  • The book network centered in the Maghreb linked Morocco, Algeria, Tunisia to Livorno, Amsterdam, and Ottoman Palestine.
  • Transnational Sephardi ties shrank in the 19th century even as new global Jewish networks expanded.
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