Middle Eastern History and Theory Conference, May 3rd-May 5th 2019
Theme: Migration, Diaspora, and Movement of Peoples
Friday, May 3rd
Registration: Begins at 4:00 p.m.
Saieh Hall 146
Round Table Discussion: 4:30 p.m. – 6:00 p.m.
Saieh Hall 146
Contextualizing Migration Studies -with- Akram Khater, North Carolina State University Ilana Feldman, The George Washington University Wendy Pearlman, Northwestern University Ulrike Präger, Salzburg University Moderated by Orit Bashkin, University of Chicago |
Reception: 6:15 p.m. – 7:30 p.m.
Hutchinson Commons
Catered by: Nepal House Indian Nepalese Restaurant
Film Screening: 7:00 pm – 9:00 pm
Saieh Hall 146
Havana Habibi looks at the cross cultural exchange and inter-migration between Africa, Cuba, and the USA; what it means to be a Cuban Belly-dancer in Revolutionary Cuba as well as the Diaspora, and travels throughout time, geography and space to tell a human story of healing, transformation, empowerment, liberation and Identity through the sensual metaphor of Bellydance.
This movie screening is free and open to the public. |
Saturday, May 4th
All panel sessions will be held in Stuart Hall
Registration – Starts at 8:00 a.m.
Stuart Hall Lobby
Coffee and a light breakfast will be provided at registration.
Session I – 8:30 a.m. – 10:00 a.m.
Stuart 101 Ottoman Studies |
Stuart 102
[Im]migration Studies |
Stuart 103 Arabic Literature |
“Reading the Cultural Migration from Greek Thought to Arabic Culture”,
Abdullah Rıdvan Gökbel, Istanbul University |
“Mapping Community and its Implications: A Case Study of Copts in Nashville”
Lydia Yousief, University of Chicago |
“Moving from Invisibility to Visibility through Palestinian Literature”
Aarushi Punia, Indian Institute of Technology, Delhi |
“Translation as a Remedy: Juristic Perspective in the Sixteenth-Century Ottoman Political Writing”
Arif Erbil, Boğaziçi University |
“Migration Movements in the Black Sea in the First Half of the 20th Century”
Cafer Sarıkaya, Boğaziçi University |
“Vocalization by women who faced violence during partitions of Palestine-Israel and India-Pakistan”
Tanzoom Ahmed, University of Chicago |
“Ottoman Travelers’ Search for Europe with the Guidance of Baedeker Editions”
Semra Horuz, TU Wien |
“Consequence of Ḥaḍrami Trans-oceanic Migrations in Indian Ocean Muslim legacy Formation”
Ashraf PonnChethil, Darul Huda Islamic University |
“The Oddities of the Language: Questioning the Authority of the Lexicon in al-Saq ʿala al-Saq”
Aidan Kaplan, University of Chicago |
Coffee Break – 10:00 – 10:15 a.m.
Session II – 10:15 a.m. – 11:15 a.m.
Stuart 101
Education |
Stuart 102
Jewish Studies |
Stuart 103
Egypt |
“Medieval Islamic Education Theory and its Implications for Today’s Islamic School Practices”
Derya Doğan, Indiana University Bloomington |
“Bedouin Tents and Camel Rides: East-West Dichotomies and Gendered Paradigms on Birthright Israel”
Jacob Beckert, Indiana University |
“Dreams Deferred: The Politics of Hope and Exile”
Fernando Revelo La Rotta, University of Chicago |
“Systems of Identity: Modes of Citizen Identity and Sociality Experienced by Female Jordanian and Syrian Refugee Students in Amman’s Public Schools”
Patricia Kubow, Indiana University |
“The Yiddish-Hebrew Kulturkampf: Historical and Contemporary Implications”
Joey Ayoub, University of Edinburgh |
“Whom Should We Shoot: Assigning Blame and Revising History in 70s Egypt”
Hazem Fahmy, University of Texas at Austin |
Coffee Break – 11:15 a.m. – 11:30 a.m.
Film Screening – 11:30 a.m. – 1:00 p.m.
Stuart Hall 101
a film by Fadi (the fdz) Baki 2017 / 29 minutes in Arabic with English subtitlesLast Days of the Man of Tomorrow is the award winning film by current Gray Center Mellon Collaborative Fellow Fadi (the fdz) Baki, who is in residence at the University of Chicago this quarter. Plot: A young filmmaker investigates the legend of Manivelle, an automaton gifted to Lebanon in 1945 that still haunts an abandoned mansion in Beirut. After being coaxed back out into the limelight, the people who knew him come forward to speak their mind, and the myth that Manivelle has constructed around himself begins to unravel.The film has been screened at over 50 international film festivals and took home the prize for Best Short Film at the BBC Arabic Film Festival, Boston Underground Film Festival, SciFi Film Festival Australia, Sapporo International Short Film Festival, Arab Film Festival (Malmö), Cinalfama Lisbon International Film Awards, Lebanese Film Festival, Batroun Mediterranean Film Festival, and the International Short Film Week Regensburg. |
Lunch – 1:00 p.m. – 2:00 p.m.
Stuart Hall, Cox Lounge (Downstairs)
Session III – 2:00 p.m. – 3:30 p.m.
Stuart 101
Libraries |
Stuart 102
|
Stuart 103
At the Margins of the Ottoman Empire |
“The Nature of Bayt al-Hikma”
Wihad Al-Tawil, University of Chicago |
“(W)rapping the Hijab: Hip-hop, Islam, and Femininity”
Aliah Ajamoughli, Indiana University Bloomington |
“The 1862 Zēytʻun Affair and the Armenian Press” Aram Ghoogasian, University of Chicago |
“The Maḥmūdiyya: Preliminary Observations on the Book Contents of a Mamluk Era Library” Kyle Wynter-Stoner, University of Chicago |
“Morality or Corruption: Analyzing Two Contradictory Approaches Regarding Iranian Women’s Hijab Based on Foreign Travellers, Memoirists and Historians’ Accounts in King Nasreddin’s Period Tehran (1848-1896)”
Zeinab (Sarah) Eskandari, University of Cincinnati |
“Traveling Dervishes: Waves of Bektashi Migration” Xhesika Bardhi, University of Chicago |
“Ottomanizing Heritage Conservation and Turkifying the Monumental Past: The Life and Works of Halil Edhem Bey”
Lauren Poulson, University of Chicago |
“The reception of Ikhwān al-Safā’s Classification of the Sciences in ʿAbd al-Raḥmān al-Bisṭāmī’s (d. 1454) al-Fawāʾiḥ al-miskiyya fī l-fawātiḥ al-Makkiyya”
Cem Turkoz, University of Chicago *note: this paper is out of theme |
“Ottomans and Yezidis on the Margins of the Empire”
Bahadin Hawar Kerborani, University of Chicago |
Coffee Break – 3:30 p.m. – 3:45 p.m.
Session IV – 3:45 p.m. – 5:15 p.m.
Stuart 101
Confronting Catastrophe: Fitna, Invasion, and Apocalypse |
Stuart 102
Politics and Policies in Saudi Arabia |
Stuart 103
Political Science |
“Rule, dissent, and the spread of information: The first and second fitnas in non-Muslim writings of the first two centuries”
Ameena Yovan, University of Chicago |
“Neo–Wahhabi in Saudi Arabia, the Challenges and Future” Abdullah Alrebh, Grand Valley State University | “Identity, Transnationalism and Power: Transnational Iraqi Shia Politics pre- and post- the 2003 Iraq War” Oula Kadhum, University of Birmingham |
“ ‘Human-Faced Beasts’: Racial Depictions of the Mongols in Armenian Manuscript Colophons”
Armen Abkarian, University of Michigan |
“The Moral and Social Effects of Labor Importation in Saudi Arabia” Benjamin Beames, University of Chicago | “Hard Forces for Soft Targets: China’s ‘Prudent Power’ and the Legitimization of Its Military Base in Djibouti”
Degang Sun, Shanghai International Studies University |
“ ‘Blessed are the strangers’: An Apocalyptic Hadith on the Virtues of Loneliness, Sadness, and Exile”
Youshaa Patel, Lafayette College |
“A Peripheral Realist Analysis of Saudi Arabia’s Foreign Policy” Miras Tolepbergen, Shanghai University | “From Colonial divide et impera to the War on Terror: The Racialized Muslim Subject in the Moroccan Hirak al-Rif” Ahmed Mitiche, University of Michigan |
Upon the conclusion of Session IV,
please make your way to the Oriental Institute for the keynote address.
Keynote Address – 5:30 p.m. – 7:00 p.m., May 5th
The Middle East History and Theory Conference proudly presents
Dr. Akram KhaterProfessor of History Khayrallah Distinguished Professor of Lebanese Diaspora Studies Director, Khayrallah Center for Lebanese Diaspora Studies Editor, International Journal of Middle East Studies On Forgotten Shores: Migration and Mobility in the Middle East |
This lecture is free and open to the public
Lamb Roast Dinner – 7:00 p.m. – 9:00 p.m.
Ida Noyes Hall
Catered by: Al Bawadi Grill
This meal is made possible by the generous support of the
Middle Eastern Studies Students’ Association (MESSA)
Sunday, May 5th
All panel sessions will be held in Stuart Hall
Breakfast – 9:00 a.m. – 9:30 a.m.
Stuart Hall
Session V – 9:30 a.m. – 11:30 a.m.
Stuart 101
Migration, Diaspora, and Movement of Peoples in Central Eurasian Contexts |
Stuart 102
Diasporic Narratives |
“Familiar Strangers: A Samarkandi Community in Mongol-Yuan Literature”
Xinyi Wei, University of Chicago
|
“Choreographies of Diaspora: Reimagining Anatolian Dance in Berlin”
Michael O’Toole, University of Chicago |
“Huihui Officials in the Embroidered Uniform Guard” Carol Fan, University of Chicago | “From Population to Community: Translation of Iranian Immigrant Community in France”
Narciss M. Sohrabi, University of Nanterre la Défense |
“The Ottoman Throne Between Tent and Metropolis: The Character and Extent of Ottoman Courtly Mobility as Represented in Mehmed Rāşid Efendi’s (d. 1735) Tārīḫ-i Rāşid and Ismaʿīl Asim Küçükçelebizāde’s (1675-1759) Tārīḫ-i Çelebizāde, a Framework Towards a Social History of Monarchy in the Ottoman Empire (c. 1660-1730)”
Arlen Wiesenthal, University of Chicago |
“Culinary Place-Identity: Palestinian Belonging in the Chilean Foodscape” Nicholas Bascuñan-Wiley, Northwestern University |
“Textbook Imperialism: 16th Century Uzbek History from a 21st Century Perspective”
August Samie, University of Chicago |
“A Women’s Movement in Transition: Iranian Counterpublics and Digital Diasporas”
Sean Widlake, Northeastern University |
Lunch – 11:30 a.m. – 12:30 p.m.
Stuart Hall
Catered by: UChicago Dining Services, Bon Appetit
The Middle East History and Theory Conference in coordination with the Department of Music at the University of Chicago and EthNoise! proudly present
Dr. Ulrike PrägerSenior Research Scientist/Post-doctoral Fellow Salzburg University Music, Migration, Liminality |
Please join us for a pre-concert and talk concert sponsored by the Department of Music at the University of Chicago:
Pre-Concert Talk by Dr. Philip V. Bohlman, University of Chicago
2:00 pm
Logan Center Performance Hall
Concert
3:00 pm – Letters from Iraq
Rahim AlHaj, joined by the Kontras Quartet, Christian Dillingham, and Nicholas Baker
Performance Hall, Reva and David Logan Center for the Arts
915 E. 60th Street Chicago, IL 60637
Tickets can be purchased at the door or online through: https://chicagopresents.uchicago.edu/events/2018-2019/2019-05-05-200000 [note: we have secured the student price for all of our attendees]
Rahim AlHaj2015 Recipient of a National Heritage Fellowship awarded by the National Endowment for the Arts 2010 Grammy nomination for Best Traditional World Music Album 2009 United States Artists Fellow Award in Music 2008 Grammy nomination for Best Traditional World Music Album 2003 Winner of the Bravo Award for Excellence in Music 2001 Award from Veterans for Peace for work towards peace 1988 Music Institute Award for Composition |