Lecture: A Poetics of Conversion - Crossing and Transgressing Religious Boundaries in Persian Literature

Thursday, February 12

Time: 12:30-2:00pm

Location: 208 Knox

Franklin Lewis

Associate Professor of Persian, Dept. of Near Eastern Languages and Civilizations

University of Chicago

Franklin Lewis is an Associate Professor of Persian Language and Literature in the Department of Near Eastern Languages and Civilizations at the University of Chicago and Deputy Director of the Center for Middle Eastern Studies at the University of Chicago. He teaches classes on Persian language and literature, Islamic thought, Sufism, Baha'i Studies, translation studies, and Middle Eastern cinema. Professor Lewis studied at U.C. Berkeley and did his graduate work in the Department of Near Eastern Languages and Civilizations at the University of Chicago. His dissertation on the life and works of the 12th-century mystical poet Sana'i, and the establishment of the ghazal genre in Persian literature, won the Foundation of Iranian Studies best dissertation prize in 1995. Prof. Lewis previously taught Persian a tEmory University, in the Department of Middle Eastern and South Asian Studies. He founded Adabiyat, an international discussion forum on the literatures of the Islamic World (including Arabic, Persian, Turkish, and Urdu) and is former President of the American Institute of Iranian Studies.

Introduction by Hossein Kamaly

Assistant Professor of Asian and Middle Eastern Cultures

Barnard College
 

Sponsored by the Middle East Institute  

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