One of the most prevalent themes within the body of postcolonial Judeo-Tunisian literature is that of nostalgia, created by displacement and exile. Nostalgia plays a prominent role in Michel Valensi's L'Empreinte and Claude Kayat's La Synagogue de Sfax, two Judeo-Tunisian novels that examine the effects of the Jewish migration from Tunisia decades after it occurred, calling into question the history surrounding this migration. Nostalgia marks each of these works with regret for a homeland and a way of life lost, as well as for a vanished social and cultural richness that could not exist anywhere else in the world, and that post-independence Tunisia could never reconstruct. Each work presents its nostalgia in a different framework, with Kayat's novel detailing the pain of watching a culture fall apart, while Valensi's characters face yet another diaspora and reminisce about Tunisia. Both works are marked by characters who cling stubbornly to the life they left behind, and whose...
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