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A Street in Marrakech

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This is a reflexive account of an American woman and her family's unpredictable journey through the private and public worlds of a traditional Muslim city in the process of change. As a Western stranger in Marrakech, Fernea was met with suspicion and hostility. The story of the slow growth of trust and acceptance between the author and her Moroccan neighbors involves the reader in everyday activities, weddings, funerals, and women's rituals. Both the author and her friends are changed by the encounters that she describes. A Street in Marrakech is a crosscultural adventure, ethnographically sound, and written in an accessible style. Titles of related interest from Waveland Azoy, Game and Power in Afghanistan, Third Edition (ISBN 9781577667209); Brenneman, As Strong as the A Kurdish Cultural Journey, Second Edition ( 9781478629306); Jordan, The Making of a Modern Globalization and Change in Saudi Arabia (ISBN 9781577667025); and Omidian, When Bamboo Bloom (ISBN 9781577667001).

382 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 1975

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1125 people want to read

About the author

Elizabeth Warnock Fernea

20 books42 followers
Elizabeth Warnock Fernea was an influential writer, filmmaker, and anthropologist who spent much of her life in the field producing numerous ethnographies and films that capture the struggles and turmoil of African and Middle Eastern cultures. Her husband, the anthropologist Robert A. Fernea, was a large influence in her life. Fernea is commonly regarded as a pioneer for women in the field of Middle East Studies.

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 34 reviews
1,213 reviews165 followers
August 18, 2020
A Woman's Tale of Acculturation in a Moroccan Neighborhood

I read this book many years ago, back in 1982, to be exact. It has stayed with me all these years because of its warm humanity, its fine description and painstaking details about the slow building of friendship and understanding between an American woman and her female Moroccan neighbors in the Rue Trésor, a small street in Marrakesh. I used it in conjunction with other works on Morocco to teach anthropology courses--such works as Geertz' "Islam Observed", Rabinow's "Doing Fieldwork in Morocco", Charhadi's "A Life Full of Holes", Maher's "Women and Property in Morocco", and Dwyer's "Images and Self-Images: Male and Female in Morocco". All of these books portray some aspect of Moroccan society, some more anthropologically rigorous than others. Books such as Dunn's "Resistance in the Desert" and Rosen's "Two Arabs, A Berber, and a Jew" add other perspectives too. While Fernea's book can be read purely for pleasure, it gives an excellent picture of what struck an American as different about Moroccan society, what cultural differences were most evident for her. If a reader can get hold of the BBC series "Disappearing World" program called "Women of Marrakesh", that makes an excellent companion to the book. A STREET IN MARRAKECH is a down to earth, interesting volume that will hold your interest and provide an excellent insight into another culture. It will open up another culture, another way of looking at the world, so even if you are not that keen to be anthropologically-enlightened, you can enjoy a vicarious travel experience. I strongly recommend it.
Profile Image for Beth Bonini.
1,416 reviews326 followers
January 25, 2017
If you are travelling to Morocco - and particularly to Marrakech - I would highly recommend this book. Even though it is set during the early 1970s, when the author and her family lived in the Medina (old walled city) of Marrakech for a year, the author's insights are still really valuable and relevant. There may be more motorcycles than donkeys on the narrow winding streets now, compared to 1971, but the medina hasn't changed all that much in 40 years. It looks and feels ancient, and truly modern encroachments (except for cell phones) are few. Not only will a visitor recognise so many of the place names in the book, which is always satisfying, but the content gives access (in the sense of understanding) to the people of Marrakech in a way that one's commercial transactions in the souks and museums really do not. I was particularly interested in Fernea's revelations about the Muslim faith and how it is practised in Morocco.

Just to give you some context, Fernea is married to an academic - her husband was an anthropology professor at the University of Texas at the time of writing - and she also refers to their experiences living in Iraq and Egypt. Her husband has come to research the market system in Morocco, but she and her three children are living a most unusual "ordinary" life. She refers to her ability to speak Arabic, albeit with an Egyptian accent, and the reader can infer that she had coping skills far beyond most Americans. She came to Marrakech when it was a glamorous and trendy place -- associated with a certain drugged-out hippie lifestyle - but except for a few references to some young, feckless American students who come into their orbit, Fernea's family was living in the very closed world of Muslim Morocco. Initially, she finds this world nearly inpenetrable - but gradually, and mostly because of her growing friendship with Aisha (a kind of household help, and also a neighbour) she begins to befriend some of the other women in the neighborhood.

The book is told in chronological style, and covers exactly a year. It does have a kind of narrative arc, as the author goes from feeling utterly foreign to somewhat a part of things, but like real life it is mostly a chronicle of domestic life with the occasional Big Event. (A wedding in the neighborhood is one of the first big events which the author and her family get to experience.) At times, because of the many characters in the book - not to mention the difficult names - it can be hard to follow, but mostly I found it really readable.
Profile Image for Parlei.
108 reviews40 followers
September 18, 2012
I typically don't enjoy reading wandering narratives, but I just couldn't put this book down. It doesn't have a particular "aim" or single thread holding the plot together, but really is an account of various experiences of an American family living in Marrakech. Elizabeth Fernea does an excellent job of creating an intriguing narrative that outlines the difficulties of many vast cultural differences. She is thoughtful, honest, and provocative. I appreciate that she holds herself accountable when she discusses how her personal motivations sometimes wins out over her responsibilities to her friends (e.g. cooking for/impressing European friends while her Moroccan friends expect her to go dancing with them at the zaweeya). This book is an excellent read for anyone interested in studying about cultural differences and raising a family across borders, political and cultural.
Profile Image for Mindy McAdams.
597 reviews38 followers
July 28, 2017
One of the best books I've ever read. Why? It's about an American family who goes to live in a foreign place with respect and curiosity. The place is Marrakech, Morocco, in the early 1970s, when only three or four families in the neighborhood had TVs. The author has come with her husband (an anthropologist) and three children to stay for a year in a rented house in the medina, the old part of the city, where the streets are too narrow for any cars. Some of the neighbors don't have electricity or running water in their homes.

Wonderfully, the book begins with the difficulties typical for anyone in this situation -- but Fernea is admirably scant on complaining. Her sentiments are mainly disappointment, because she and her husband had both hoped very much to become part of the life of their adopted community. For quite a while, it seems like that will never happen. She's not bitter or angry about it. She worries about her children especially -- they are at the perfect age for this experience, old enough to go out on their own but not yet dating and chasing boy- and girlfriends.

Gradually, things begin to change, and some people in the neighborhood begin to let the Ferneas in, little by little. This is a marvelous thing to see, and Fernea very skillfully shows it rather than telling us. In fact this book is an exemplar of showing and not telling. The only thing she really "tells" are her own feelings, and she does so sparingly.

I imagine Fernea had excellent editors (including, no doubt, her own family) to help make this story flow so well and reveal so much without ever getting bogged down or repeating itself. I don't say that to detract from her achievement here but rather to emphasize that this is far better than most personal accounts because -- even with her very personal view of the events and relationships -- it is universal. I love it so much that she was open, and patient, and she did not push or demand. She waited, and she treated people well, and bit by bit, the world opened itself to her.

Toward the end, as she and her family prepare to return to the U.S., she worries about how her own presence and interactions with the women of her small neighborhood have changed them and their lives. Of course there's nothing to be done at that point. It's an excellent thought, though -- we are not encased in a bubble, and our movement through this world has consequences to everyone we touch.

Read about the author's life in this tribute/obituary.
Profile Image for Diane S ☔.
4,901 reviews14.6k followers
May 15, 2013
Fernea, Bob and their three children decide to live in Marrakesh, on the Rue Tresor, which is basically an alleyway, instead of in the area where the mother foreigners tend to live. She wants to really get to know and experience all that the Morocco city has to offer and get to know the real people that live in this city. In humorous and wonderfully straightforward writing. the reader follows the family with their difficulties in navigating a culture they are not part of or very familiar with.
I enjoyed reading about this family, the children's problems and school and how they resolve them, the tasks of marketing and cooking are all unfamiliar and new. The people of the Rue Tressor seem not to like the strangers in their midst, they are looked on with suspicion and the family begins to think this will never change. Yet slowly and surely it does, small steps at a time. Wonderful view of this city and their culture. Not sure I could be as fearless as this family, though fun to think of experiencing something new.
Profile Image for Rebecca.
86 reviews9 followers
October 16, 2009
More than 30 years later, I can still identify quite a bit with the Morocco this author describes ... the community of a single neighborhood with all of its sisterhood, hospitality, competition, fears and celebrations. She is more open to authentic Moroccan experiences, and more understanding of the common threads between societies, than most books I've read from the same period.
Profile Image for Lilli.
7 reviews11 followers
August 6, 2016
This is by far one of my most favorite books. I am rarely able to reread books but this is one that I still find myself as mesmerized and interested as the first time I read this book more than 15 years ago.
Profile Image for Connie.
116 reviews18 followers
January 14, 2020
I started this book a few months ago...and was thinking it was ok...but not too exciting...then I went to Morocco and stayed in Marrakech for a few days. Then...I got it! I really got it. Even tho it was written a few decades ago...it was still the same Marrakech and I understood the medina and the square, and the food, and the Mosque, and the traditions after traveling thru Morocco for a few weeks. The author of the book stayed over a year and spoke a bit of Arabic...although Moroccan Arabic IS different from some other Arabic speaking countries. Her book was about the women and their struggles being in an Islamic country that was just breaking thru a few barriers of gender issues and how it was changing then.
Profile Image for Brittany.
22 reviews2 followers
May 24, 2025
This recount of the year BJ and her family lived on Rue Tresor in Marrakech transported me right back to the Medina. Such a realistic and discerning tale of the city and people which still rings true 50 years later. It took me a long time to get through the heavily descriptive chapters because I was constantly referring back to the map and family tree of characters to complete the picture in my mind. Another great aid to learning more Arabic and insight into Islam. I would love to read more by Fernea.
28 reviews
May 12, 2023
I bought this book in preparation for my first visit to Morocco, but I only read it weeks after coming back home. And I am actually glad that happened.
This book allowed me to revisit memories from my trip. It’s surprising how accurately the author described places and people in Marrakesh. Even though the book was written in the 70s the city doesn't seem to have changed that much.

Good read, although a bit slow in places and maybe slightly too long.
Profile Image for Andy Perdue.
Author 2 books7 followers
January 31, 2013
My favorite book by one of my favorite authors, this captures a year in the life of an American family living in Morocco. I have read this a half-dozen times - and could easily pick it up again.
Profile Image for Elizabeth Wix.
32 reviews5 followers
June 2, 2018
Fascinating and full of great details - a little plodding in parts - but worth the effort.
Profile Image for Danielle Aleixo.
220 reviews4 followers
August 31, 2017
A Street in Marrakesh

A tender story of an American family living for one year in Marrakesh. A real and beautiful tale of coexistence.
Profile Image for Jamie.
157 reviews10 followers
Read
April 9, 2020
It’s hard to write a meaningful review about a book I am only able to read with such imperfection, but I enjoyed it immensely. Both the author’s desperate wish to know the people of her temporary home better, and the delicate and brave way she shows her interest in them as individuals and as a people, rather than as a project taken on. I recognize the spirit in myself, if not all her success.
Profile Image for Betty Talley.
54 reviews
June 27, 2021
I was glad I have traveled to Marrakech because it made this book more meaningful!
310 reviews
Read
October 7, 2014
A Street in Marrakech 10252007 a personal encounter with the lives of Moroccan women by Elizabeth Warnock Fernea


I read this book many years ago, back in 1982, to be exact. It has stayed with me all these years because of its warm humanity, its fine description and painstaking details about the slow building of friendship and understanding between an American woman and her female Moroccan neighbors in the Rue Trésor, a small street in Marrakesh. I used it in conjunction with other works on Morocco to teach anthropology courses--such works as Geertz' "Islam Observed", Rabinow's "Doing Fieldwork in Morocco", Charhadi's "A Life Full of Holes", Maher's "Women and Property in Morocco", and Dwyer's "Images and Self-Images: Male and Female in Morocco". All of these books portray some aspect of Moroccan society, some more anthropologically rigorous than others. While Fernea's book can be read purely for pleasure, it gives an excellent picture of what struck an American as different about Moroccan society, what cultural differences were most evident for her. If a reader can get hold of the BBC series "Disappearing World" program called "Women of Marrakesh", that makes an excellent companion to the book. A STREET IN MARRAKECH is a down to earth, interesting volume that will hold your interest and provide an excellent insight into another culture. I strongly recommend it.


I am an American woman who has been living in Marrakesh for the past 9 years. I just read this book. Even though it was written in the early 1970's, I found it to be a very accurate portrayal of life in the old medina, even now. The author and her husband are anthropologists, and both spoke fluent Arabic upon their arrival, from having lived previously in Iraq and Egypt. Therefore, the author was able to converse with people daily, and understand completely, what they were saying. This is something I have never been able to do. Because of this, she is able to give a VERY detailed look at an aspect of life which is nearly impossible for most outsiders to penetrate--the hidden life of Medina women, which takes place behind high, closed walls. What she describes is very similar to what I have experienced here of life with my Moroccan husband's family, and the people who live around them in the Medina. This book is NOT a study of political or historical conditions--it is the detailed, personal history of one family's year-long experience of living, and immersing itself, in the life of Marrakesh.


I read this book in preparation for a return trip to Morocco and wish I'd read it the first time. This is a story of what it's REALLY like to move to a foreign country--non-western--and try to live as the people do. For those of us who have read books like "A Year in Provence" and suspect that it all sounds too good to be true, this book is a refreshing change. It's told from a woman's perspective, and focuses on domestic life, the sharp difference between public and home behavior in Islamic societies, the pervasiveness of religion, and male-female roles. I would have liked a bit of a broader perspective--the author's descriptions of public unrest and a strike were tantalizing, and I would have liked to know a bit more about what was going on in the country at the time, but she describes pretty clearly why Europeans or Americans, well-meaning though they may be, wouldn't necessarily be met with open arms.
Profile Image for Grace.
6 reviews1 follower
January 13, 2019
I actually enjoyed a lot about this book since I read it while traveling through Marrakech myself. Her detailed descriptions of wandering through the medina as well as the historical and cultural information were still as accurate in 2019 as they were n the 70s. These detailed descriptions although great for me while traveling, seemed more like her trying to get down the memories for herself on paper, rather than as having any significance to the story. Yes we get it, the medina has many winding, old, passages. Also as a story and a narrative I found myself sometimes a bit bored and often annoyed at her constant insecurities as a Westerner in her neighborhood.
Profile Image for McKenzie.
784 reviews8 followers
June 7, 2013
In preparing myself mentally for my upcoming trip to Marrakech, I was hesitant about reading one of the many travelogues written by foreigners who spent a year in Morocco, but A Street in Marrakech caught my eye, and I am thankful I gave it a chance. Elizabeth "B.J." Fernea moves her family of five to Marrakech in the 1970s when her husband, an anthropology professor at the University of Texas, gets a year sabbatical to research the markets of the city. The family had previously lived in Egypt and Iran, and was interested in getting to know Moroccans, so they chose to live in the Medina instead of the newer French district where the majority of foreigners live.

Fernea's narrative details her attempts to get to know her neighbors, the struggles her children go through in learning French and adapting to a new culture, her husband's progress in his research, and her own thoughts and feelings as Marrakech becomes home. The most fascinating part of this is her relationships with the women on their street, as they come to accept Fernea as a friend and allow her into their lives. She learns about the religious customs, the expectations families have for their daughters, and especially about how the private lives the women have at home differ from their lives in public.

Fernea's writing is strong and personal; she captures the essence of her friends, portrays the humor and occasional discomfort she encounters honestly, and above all illustrates how a seemingly chaotic Arabic Muslim country can come to feel like home if approached with an open mentality. Though I know Marrakech will have changed vastly in the 40 years since Fernea's family lived there, A Street in Marrakech helped me understand more about the culture and I am now even more excited for my upcoming trip. As in Hope and Other Dangerous Pursuits, I can recommend this for people with an interest in the subject matter, but may not necessarily recommend it to everyone.
Profile Image for Sharon K F.
161 reviews
March 28, 2020
Elizabeth Fernea and her professor husband, with their 3 children, go to live in the inner city of Marrakech in the early 70s. She arrives speaking Arabic, but it's the wrong dialect. Miraculously, the maid her landlady provides her knows her dialect and is willing to interpret not only what people are saying but what's happening, where to go, how to behave, and eventually is her key in getting to know the women on her street. In one short year she begins to make inroads into the lives of the women on her street and to even consider some of them her friends. She delves into the regional practices of Islam, such as praying to the saints and mediator, and sacrificing camels, without discernment as to how opposed they are to her own "Christian" beliefs. With an anthropologist's mind, she realizes that she makes many cultural gaffs and when she leaves she wonders if she has left destruction or help behind in the relations between the women.

I found it fascinating and enlightening. It is so well written in the form of a story of her everyday life in an unusual place for an American to have found herself, that I was pulled in and wanted to know what happened next.
Profile Image for Melinda.
1,020 reviews
May 13, 2014
The story of American woman and her family's unpredictable journey through the private and public worlds of a traditional Muslim city in the process of change set in 1970's.

A very detailed story depicting a family living in Morocco trying to acclimate in their two year home. Cultural, religious issues as well trying to befriend neighbors along with fitting in as an outsider in all areas associated with an unfamiliar foreign environment.

If you are hoping to find a travelogue rather than a memoir you might want to pass on A Street in Marrakech.
641 reviews2 followers
October 17, 2022
recommended by Mel on the podcast Strong Sense of Place. This is a true account of an American woman and her family who move to Marrakech for one year in 1971. Her husband is on sabbatical from his job as a university professor and they decide to live in the medina (old city) of Marrakech and to embrace the lifestyle. They have 3 young children (ages 11, 10,9) who adapt with varying degrees of ease to their life. I admired their sense of adventure, and their resilience as they attempted to understand and live in such a completely different culture.
23 reviews
October 4, 2013
Although written in the early 70's, this book is still a great introduction to Marrakech. If you are planning a trip there, this is a must read. It is well written, moves quickly and provides a wonderful description of this complex and rich city. It truly enhanced my visit there!
Profile Image for Annakarima Sanders.
12 reviews1 follower
Read
November 4, 2013
wonderfull book, have read it 4 times already, ....as it discribes all i have seen ,,,
Profile Image for Rose.
2,044 reviews4 followers
March 10, 2016
Enthralling story.
Profile Image for Brian Angle.
243 reviews2 followers
March 15, 2019
Slice of life memoir about a woman and her family's year living in the medina of Marrakech in 1971. Reads like her personal journal: good feeling for life in that time/place but otherwise mundane.
Profile Image for Michelle.
533 reviews11 followers
March 26, 2025
I loved this. The typical travel memoir author plants herself in a new place, immediately encounters a crew of larger-than-life characters, and gets herself embroiled in numerous dramas. Fernea does none of these things. Her struggle is that she wants to become part of the small neighborhood she and her husband have moved to, but she can't seem to find a way in. She barely even sees her neighbors, can't figure out prices at the local market, and in spite of speaking Arabic understands only half the things her landlady says (she speaks Egyptian, not Moroccan, Arabic). It's such an honest portrait of moving to a place to which you have no real connection, and a much more accurate depiction of what to expect as an expat.

Eventually, through a growing friendship with her housekeeper, she does meet the women of the zanka and even gets invited to a zaweeya (religious lodge) and a murabit (sacred tomb). At the same time, her husband as part of his anthropology research is meeting with local men to learn about their customs, but the world of these men is very different from the world of women she sees. When one asks her how she found the women's zaweeya and she says it was pleasant, he lectures her on how serious it is and says she must have misinterpreted..
"Pleasant, Madame, pleasant? You describe the great mystical trance of the derdaba or religious dance as merely pleasant? I think perhaps you are mistaken or were not paying proper attention."
His tone irritated me, that same patronizing tone, but I tried to keep calm. "Really, Abdul Lateef, everyone behaved as though they were at a party, having a good time. Really they did. You can ask my friends."
He pursed his lips. "The derdaba is a serious, a psychological experience, Madame. It is deep and important."
"But--" Bob was trying to catch my eye, willing me to be quiet. But I didn't want to be quiet. I knew that this kind of dancing and music session had often been described as therapeutic, cathartic, full of intensity and drama, but my whole impression of the occasion had been that all were in a gay and lighthearted mood and enjoyed themselves thorough. "It was fun, Abdul Lateef, " I finished boldly.
Bob winced; Mustapha looked scandalized. Abdul Lateef opened his mouth, then shut it again. My last remark had apparently place me beyond the pale, someone to whom nothing more could be said.
Moulay Mustapha tried to make peace. "But, Lateef, maybe the women's derdaba is different? Who knows what the women do in their zaweeya?"
"Yes, Mustapha," agreed Lateef. "Who knows? Who knows indeed?" He shook his head mournfully. "Only God knows!" And he raised his gaze upward, as if asking God to give him patience and understanding of this strange unknown world of women. (p. 294-295)

The end, however, is bittersweet, as she realizes that her presence has caused a rift between two old friends. I look forward to reading more of Fernea's perceptive work.
I began to wonder about my own motivations and ultimate responsibilities in the situation I seemed to have precipitated. I had wanted to be accepted, obviously. I had wanted to learn, but now I was leaving, and those who had accepted me and taught me what I knew--Aisha, Kenza, Lateefa, Lalla Fadna, Zahia, Fatima Hanna--would be left behind. We had all been changed by the encounter, but was it worth it, to me, to them? Was it fair, human even? I could not answer my own questions. (p. 350)
Profile Image for Hayley Chwazik-Gee.
182 reviews1 follower
October 16, 2025
This was the perfect memoir to read before my trip to Morocco tomorrow! Though my library copy suggests it’s an early relic from a recovered shipwreck, “A Street in Marrakech” was actually published in 1975 by writer Elizabeth Warnock Fernea. Elizabeth recounts her year living in the Medina of Marrakech with her husband and three children. She makes a deep effort to understand the culture with an open mind and lack of judgement. This book emphasizes many aspects of Moroccan culture: faith in Allah and the saints, belief in baraka (blessings) and curses, the deep division of public and private life, and the importance of family ties and lineage. It was a transportive read and one worth checking out!
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