Student Profile: Zeinab Azarbadegan
Zeinab Azarbadegan is a PhD candidate in the Department of History, in the International and Global History (IGH) track. Her research focuses on inter-imperial relations and impact of new concepts and technologies in the nineteenth century Middle East and South Asia. Her dissertation, entitled “Bloodless Battles: Contested Sovereignty and Citizenship in Ottoman Iraq, 1831-1909,” examines the conflicting and evolving interests in Ottoman Iraq analyzing Ottoman, Qajar -in modern Iran-, and British interests, policies, and personnel, that sought to assert sovereignty over both the space and the population. Zeinab’s research has been supported by the GSAS International Travel Fellowship and Sakıp Sabancı Summer Fellowship Award.
Zeinab was recently interviewed by the Global Studies Blog at Columbia University on her research and interests in Persian lithographs, and in the Nafisi book collection at the Columbia University Libraries: Persian Lithographs: Jām-i Jam: “The World Revealing Goblet”, An interview with Zeinab Azarbadegan
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