News Spring 2018
A break dancing battle in Casablanca.Credit. Yassine Alaoui Ismaili for The New York Times
MEI Faculty Rashid Khalidi, one of the leading academics in the study of the 20th century Palestinian national movement, will receive the 5th WOCMES Award on Wednesday 18th of July 2018.
MEI congratulates scholar Hossein Kamaly on his new book, God and Man in Tehran: Contending Visions of the Divine from the Qajars to the Islamic Republic.
Hossein Kamaly is a scholar of the Middle East, focusing on the history of ideas. He has taught at Barnard College and Columbia University and lives in Larchmont, NY.
MEI Professor Rashid Khalidi writes for The Nation on Palestine seventy years after the Nakba.
“The natives are still there, unified by decades of occupation and colonization since 1967, and they are restless. Those Palestinians who have managed to remain in historical Palestine—in spite of the ceaseless efforts to dispossess them—continue to resist erasure. Outside of Palestine, an equal number remain profoundly attached to their homeland and to the right of return. The Palestinians have not forgotten, they have not gone away, and the memory of Palestine and its dismemberment has not been effaced. Indeed, wider international audiences are increasingly aware of these realities.”
The Columbia Global Centers promote and facilitate the collaborative and impactful engagement of the University’s faculty, students, and alumni with the world, to enhance understanding, address global challenges, and advance knowledge and its exchange. The Global Centers, as envisioned by President Lee C. Bollinger, were founded with the objective of connecting the local with the global, to create opportunities for shared learning and to deepen the nature of global dialogue.
The Sakıp Sabancı Center for Turkish Studies was formally inaugurated on May 4th, 2018, with a panel discussion titled “Human Rights and Hybrid Regimes.”
Introduced by: Holger A. Klein, Interim Director, The Sakıp Sabancı Center for Turkish Studies
Moderators: John Huber, Columbia University, and Ayşe Kadıoğlu, Sabancı University
Panelists: Sebnem Gumuscu, Middlebury College, Fuat Keyman, Sabancı University, Lenore Martin, Emmanuel College, and David Waldner, University of Virginia.
The Sakıp Sabancı Chair and Center for Turkish Studies are the first initiative of its kind in the United States. Established with a $10 million gift, the goal of the professorship and the center is to increase knowledge and awareness of Turkey through research, teaching and intellectual exchange.
The final Uprising 13/13 seminar will address how to think about counterrevolutions in relation to all the other modalities of revolt and resistance that we have studied this year (civil disobedience, #BLM, breaking silence, Standing Rock, etc.). How do we talk about the counterrevolutions as a distinct form of uprising?
With Malcolm Gladwell, author; Bernard E. Harcourt, Columbia University; Laleh Khalili, Centre for Palestine Studies, SOAS, University of London; Massimiliano Tomba, University of California Santa Cruz.
Moderated by Jeremy Kessler and Emmanuelle Saada.
The seminar will be streamed live here; also posted now is a reading guide by Emily Gruber to The Counterrevolution. Essays "The Aftermath" by Laleh Khalili, "The Paris Commune and the Poetry of the Unknown" by Massimiliano Tomba, and "How Our Government Became Maoist: The Paradoxical Legacy of May '68" are all posted here in advance of the seminar.
April 26, 2018 from 6:15 p.m. to 8:45 p.m.
Riverside Church Assembly Hall
490 Riverside Drive New York, NY 10027
SIPA's MENA Forum and SIPA's Palestine Working Group hosted a conversation with Salam Fayyad, economist and former prime minister of the Palestinian Authority, to discuss regional developments and the prospects for Israeli-Palestinian peace on March 27th, 2018,
Moderator: Safwan Masri, Executive Vice President for Global Centers and Global Development at Columbia University.
View full events details here.
Film director Avi Mograbi screened his 2016 documentary Between Fences at Columbia University on April 2, 2018. The screening was followed by a Q&A session with Mograbi and MEI faculty member Hamid Dabashi, Hagop Kevorkian Professor of Iranian Studies and Comparative Literature.
See full event details here.
MEI Director Brinkley Messick delivers a talk on his new book, Shari'a Scripts: A Historical Anthropology, at the Institute for the Study of Muslim Civilisations (ISMC) at the Aga Khan University in London.
Columbia University’s Sakıp Sabancı Center for Turkish Studies is pleased to announce up to 5 competitive Summer Fellowships for doctoral students in any area of Turkish Studies, including the study of Turkish-speaking peoples from ancient periods to the modern as well as the study of cultures and civilizations in the former territories of the Ottoman Empire and within the borders of the modern Republic of Turkey.
Saba Mahmood, Professor of Anthropology at the University of California at Berkeley, passed away on March 10th, 2018. The cause was pancreatic cancer. Professor Mahmood specialized in Sociocultural Anthropology and was a scholar of modern Egypt.
Mahmood made path-breaking contributions to contemporary debates on secularism, opening up new ways of understanding religion in public life and contesting received assumptions about both religion and the secular. Against an increasingly shrill scholarship denouncing Muslim societies, she brought a nuanced and educated understanding of Islam into discussions of feminist theory, ethics and politics. Her publications and presentations have reverberated throughout the humanities and social sciences, profoundly shaping the scholarship of a new generation of scholars as they develop a thoughtful, knowledgeable, and critical approach to religion in modernity.
The University Committee on Asia and the Middle East (UCAME) announces the de Bary undergraduate summer language fellowship for non-U.S. citizens who are working on East Asian, Middle Eastern, and South Asian studies.
On Thursday, March 22, 2018, at 5pm, MEI Faculty Dagmar Riedel, Marie Curie scholar in Madrid, will discuss her fellowship project on the manuscripts of the Kitāb al-shifāʾ by the Malikī jurist ʿIyāḍ b. Mūsā al-Yaḥsubī (1083–1149 CE), also known as Qāḍī ʿIyāḍ. This talk is part of the Religion and Writing Seminar.
With the support of new technology and conservation techniques, Columbia University Libraries and a group of Philadelphia-area institutions have received a three-year $500,000 grant from the Council on Library and Information Resources, funded by the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation, to digitize hundreds of manuscripts and paintings. The project will shed light on both the rich cultural heritage of the Muslim world and the collaboration between Islamic civilizations and the West. Religion, medicine, history, literature, astronomy and mathematics are among the subjects in the collection.
As scholars engaged in the study of Africa, the Middle East and South Asia, we are frequently confronted with a shared set of theoretical challenges: What epistemologies do we employ? On what terms may we connect, compare and contrast conceptual vocabularies sourced from across these regions? How do colonial structures and rubrics intervene in our scholarship, and is it possible to think past them? At this year's MESAAS Graduate Student Conference 2018, we hope to build a repertory of integrative modes of researching these regions that transcends the orthodox model of area studies.
Keynote lecture by Prof. Simon Gikandi, Princeton University.
Plenary session: discussion of MEI director Brinkley Messick's Shari'a Scripts.
MEI Faculty Lila Abu-Lughod delivers the 2018 Clifford Geertz Commemorative Lecture at Princeton University.
Following in Geertz’ footsteps by thinking comparatively, Abu-Lughod will reflect on Palestine’s apparent political impasses in relation to the experiences of other colonized places and peoples. This reflection is inspired specifically by the current ferment in critical indigenous and native studies about settler colonialism in places like Australia and North America. And now Palestine. New imaginations of sovereignty and self-determination are emerging in indigenous activism, whether enabled by the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous People or the politics of refusal of liberal “recognition.” The journey goes to a variety of museums and ritual spaces of recognition and ends with questions about how to judge the efflorescence of recent Palestinian cultural projects like the new Palestinian Museum. The infatuation with the framework of settler colonialism in Palestinian studies is, however contested and even problematic, productive precisely because of the way it generates comparisons and solidarities that burst open exhausted political imaginations and bring together the political, material, and moral.
Columbia University's popular student group, The Muslim Protagonist presents its annual symposium to be held Saturday February 24, 2018.
The theme for this year's symposium is “Authenticity?” A series of panels and workshops will discuss Muslim representation in popular culture: Who gets to shape the Muslim Narrative? What kinds of stories are being told about Muslims? What makes a story “authentic”? And why should we care?
Dr. Abed Kanaaneh joins the the Middle Eastern, South Asian and African Studies at Columbia as a visiting scholar. He recently completed an award winning dissertation "Hizballah in Lebanon: Al-Muqawamah (Resistance) as a Contra-Hegemonic Project” at Tel Aviv University. His research interests include: Shiite political thought, radical Islamic movements, revolutionary thought in the Middle East, the Arab-Israeli Conflict, and new Marxism in the Middle East.
Abed was previously the co-director of the Equality Policy Department at Sikkuy—The Association for the Advancement of Civic Equality in Israel. He also headed communist member of parliament Dov Khenin’s staff and was the spokesperson of the Arab Center for Alternative Planning.
MEI congratulates Director Brinkley Messick on his new book, Shari'a Scripts: A Historical Anthropology.
A case study in the textual architecture of the venerable legal and ethical tradition at the center of the Islamic experience, Sharīʿa Scripts is a work of historical anthropology focused on Yemen in the early twentieth century. There—while colonial regimes, late Ottoman reformers, and early nationalists wrought decisive changes to the legal status of the sharīʿa, significantly narrowing its sphere of relevance—the Zaydī school of jurisprudence, rooted in highland Yemen for a millennium, still held sway.
Safwan M. Masri, Executive Vice President for Global Centers and Global Development and author of Tunisia: An Arab Anomaly, comments on the present situation in Tunisia, to offer his perspective on how recent demonstrations in Tunisia may be contextualized, and to counter assertions that they are a reprise of the 2011 revolutionary moment.
MEI Faculty Dagmar A. Riedel, currently Marie Curie Fellow at the Spanish National Research Council (CSIC) in Madrid, is co-organizing with Benito Rial Costas (UCM) an interdisciplinary workshop on literature on prophets and saints in medieval and early modern Iberia. The workshop will take place in Madrid (Spain), on Thursday and Friday, 22-23 February 2018. For more information about the program, see https://researchblogs.cul.columbia.edu/islamicbooks/mashqi/
We are pleased to welcome Anaheed Al-Hardan to Columbia University as the Arcapita Visiting Professor for the Spring 2018 semester. Anaheed Al-Hardan comes to us from the American University of Beirut where she is an Assistant Professor of Sociology in the Department of Sociology, Anthropology and Media Studies.
Columbia University Libraries is proud to be a partner recipient of a $500,000 grant to support the digitization of Islamic manuscripts and paintings dating from 1000 to 1900. The Manuscripts of the Muslim World project—supported by a Digitizing Hidden Collections grant from the Council on Library and Information Resources (CLIR), which is made possible by funding from the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation—will provide digital access to 576 Islamic manuscripts and 827 paintings that have previously been largely invisible to scholars. The project will begin in April 2018 and continue for three years.
The GSAS Internal Fellowship Application is now available online.
Students may use this online application for six fellowships administered by GSAS.