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Center for the Study of Muslim Societies at Columbia University

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Hiba Bou Akar's "For the War Yet to Come" wins 2019 Nikkie Keddie Book Award, Anthony Leeds Prize

December 10, 2019 by Guest User

Hiba Bou Akar's For the War Yet to Come: Planning Beirut's Frontiers was awarded the 2019 Middle East Studies Association Nikkie Keddie Book Award and the Anthony Leeds Prize, sponsored by the American Anthropological Association (AAA) - Society for Urban, National, and Transnational / Global Anthropology (SUNTA) section. The Nikki Keddie Book Award recognizes outstanding scholarly work in the area of religion, revolution, and/or society. The Leeds Prize is awarded each year for the outstanding book published the previous year in urban, national and/or transnational anthropology. The prize is awarded to a book that uses ethnographic data from complex, transnational, urban societies in methodologically and theoretically innovative ways.

Hiba Bou Akar is an Assistant Professor in the Urban Planning program at Columbia GSAPP. For the War Yet to Come examines how Beirut’s post-civil war peripheries have been transformed through multiple planning exercises into contested frontiers that are mired in new forms of conflict. It contributes to planning thought by studying planning practice within a framework of past and anticipated violence.

December 10, 2019 /Guest User
new books
Gender, Governance and Islam

Book Launch: Gender, Governance and Islam

November 02, 2019 by Guest User

Compiled against a global backdrop of mounting culture wars in the realms of gender, family, and sexuality, Gender, Governance and Islam aims to unsettle and interrogate the key conceptual categories through which the politics of gender in Muslim majority countries and Muslim diasporas have been commonly apprehended. It does so through finely-grained analyses of a continuum of cases illustrating the politics of gender and patterns of grass-roots mobilization and resistance. Efforts to enforce gender hierarchies and uphold male entitlement on the one hand, and diverse patterns of grassroots resistance and (periodic accommodation by power holders), on the other, cut across all cases. A key conclusion is that this is a uniquely productive moment to de-Orientalize scholarship on gender in Muslim societies by breaking the shackles of lingering binaries such as tradition/modernity, Islam/secularism, imperialism/national authenticity.

More details here.

November 02, 2019 /Guest User
past events (2019)

Lecture: Defeated Revolutionaries, Lasting Legacies

October 22, 2019 by Guest User
October 22, 2019 /Guest User
past events (2019)

Global Scholars Program in Tunis and Morocco: Islam and the Modern World

October 13, 2019 by Guest User

Supplement and extend the ideas discussed in the Core Curriculum by reading texts from North African and Muslim thinkers, and by completing an independent research project in the field

Program Overview

The Global Scholars Program in Tunis and Morocco: Islam and the Modern World program will survey historical texts that emerge in and around Europe’s engagement with Muslim societies and the creation of a “modern world.” It will explore key issues surrounding the history of the Enlightenment, the rise of historicism and the growing interest in universal histories through the engagement with Arabic texts and North African histories from the mid-eighteenth century to the mid twentieth century.

All interested GSP students must enroll in an accompanying course held on Columbia's campus in the Spring 2020 semester: ISLAM AND THE MODERN WORLD: Critical Texts and Practices in the Study of Muslim Societies. The course is designed to expand the intellectual worlds students are generally exposed to in Contemporary Civilizations and similar “Big Books” courses by having them engage with primary texts from Muslim intellectuals--- primarily from North Africa. The course is also designed to expand the material worlds of students by taking them to do field research in Tunisia and Morocco, where they will meet their own peers; intellectuals and teachers; and conduct guided work in archives and repositories.

This two-week Summer 2020 field research and study abroad experience will allow students to put into practice the analytical and research skills they gained in the spring in order to finalize their fuller research project that they will continue to work on during and after their visits to Tunis, Rabat, and Fez.

Visits will be made to libraries, archives, museum collections, and literary societies in both cities as well as time set aside to work alongside local academics, social workers, creative and visual artists through classroom and site visits.

The Global Scholars Program (GSP) is an innovative study abroad program, offering undergraduates a unique hands-on international research experience in topics of transnational importance, using social science, humanities, and scientific frameworks. Global topics are explored in more than one location, giving students first-hand opportunities to understand and compare how local communities approach these issues.

The next application deadline is November 8, 2019.

Click here for more information and to apply for the GSP.

October 13, 2019 /Guest User
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