Skip to main content
Events from September 27, 2023 – February 9 – Page 2 – Islam, the Humanities and the Human Events from September 27, 2023 – February 9 – Page 2 – Islam, the Humanities and the Human

Playing for Time: One Thousand and One Nights

Conklin 445

One Thousand and One Nights is a work made of and by translation. The earliest Arabic fragments are already translations of an earlier Persian work, which borrowed in turn from … Read More

Fantasmic Objects: Art and Sociality from Lebanon, 1920-1950

Hahne 322

In Fantasmic Objects, Kirsten L. Scheid offers a striking study of both modern art in Lebanon and modern Lebanon through art. By focusing on the careers of Moustapha Farrouk and Omar Onsi, forefathers of an iconic national repertoire, and their rebellious student Saloua Raouda Choucair, founder of an antirepresentational, participatory art, Scheid traces an emerging sense … Read More

The Dawn is Too Far : Film Screening + Q&A

PRCC Essex Room

The Dawn is Too Far shares a multi-generational perspective of those who came as students, refugees, and exiles to the U.S., particularly in the context of the 1979 Iranian Revolution. This film charts the longer history of Iranian Americans in the San Francisco Bay area and the ways they have been impacted and contributed to … Read More

The Metaverse and its Premoderns: Islam in an Expanding Reality

Warren 312

      In February 2022, Turkey’s Directorate of Religious Affairs landed in the news when it announced that performing the pilgrimage to Mecca in the Metaverse does not count as a ‘real hajj’. Mixed reactions to this declaration aside, this talk argues that, in the Metaverse era, the existence of a visible but immaterial … Read More

Workshop: Race and Gender in Islamic Art

The Race and Gender in Islamic Art Workshop brings together a group of scholars who seek to acknowledge the ways in which race and gender converge and jointly impact codes … Read More

Book Talk: Building Local Support: Architectural Patronage for Multiconfessional Communities in Ottoman Greece and Albania

Warren 312

In the early nineteenth century, some of the most consequential developments in Ottoman architecture unfolded not in Istanbul but on the empire’s frontier. This talk explores the ambitious building program of Ali Pasha of Ioannina (r. 1788–1822), the renegade governor of Greece and Albania whose architectural patronage ranged from mosques to dervish lodges and even Orthodox … Read More