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Journal article

Po(o)pular culture

English
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2016
AUC Library
Taylor & Francis Group
Oxon
Africa | Northern Africa

Marginalized groups and individuals in Morocco are subject to modes of representation, in which the images and symbols of dirt used to describe/treat them as bouzebal (Bouzebal is derived from the Standard Arabic word ?Azbal? (trash) and the darija term ?zbal? (also trash). Azbal is a plural word for zibala. It is usually used to refer to literal waste and things that are no longer needed. Zbal is polysemic in that it can also be employed to indicate junky beings (no longer needed in society) or people with low moral standards. Bouzebal, however, is a strictly pejorative word used to denote a person with a lowly social status. It is also used to label members from the same social class whom one deems to be inferior to oneself.) loom large. The label bouzebal (meaning social junky) is a complex term that was initially meant to pin down socially disadvantaged people as trashy types that are deeply entrenched in filth. This article studies these and similar modes of representation in...

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