New Books in Intellectual History

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

Jan 13, 2026
Noam Sienna, a scholar specializing in Jewish culture within the Islamic world, delves into the vibrant literary tapestry of North African Jewish communities. He discusses how these communities fostered a transnational book culture connecting regions from Fez to Livorno. Sienna highlights the unique role of libraries as family collections and the challenges of cataloging Judeo-Arabic texts. He also presents the often-overlooked labor of scribes and the emotional impacts of books, while previewing his next project on early Ottoman Sephardi printing.
Ask episode
AI Snips
Chapters
Books
Transcript
Episode notes
INSIGHT

Books As Social Objects

  • Books function as social objects created and moved through human relationships, not just texts or artifacts.
  • Examining material features (paper, bindings, annotations) reveals networks of production and use.
INSIGHT

Hybrid Print-Manuscript World

  • North African Jewish communities engaged print without local presses by importing and copying printed books into manuscripts.
  • This hybrid print-manuscript ecosystem challenges European models that separate print and non-print societies.
INSIGHT

Transnational Maghrebi Networks

  • The book traces a Maghrebi core (Morocco, Algeria, Tunisia) connected to Livorno, Amsterdam, Ottoman Palestine, and Sephardi diasporas.
  • Geographic networks shift in the 19th century from pan-Sephardic ties to narrower local and new Ashkenazi connections.
Get the Snipd Podcast app to discover more snips from this episode
Get the app