TIME CHANGE: 5PM START TIME - CMES: Between House and Orchard: Family, Shariʿa and the Making of the Modern Middle East

Date: 

Monday, April 9, 2018, 5:00pm to 7:00pm

Location: 

Barker Center, Rm 114, 12 Quincy Street, Cambridge, MA

The CMES Sohbet-i Osmani Lecture Series presents

Beshara Doumani

BOOK COVER

Joukowsky Family Professor of Modern Middle East History, Department of History, Brown University

In writings about Islam, women, and modernity in the Middle East, family and religion are frequently invoked but rarely historicized. Based on a wide range of local sources, Beshara Doumani argues that there is no such thing as the Muslim or Arab family type that is so central to Orientalist, nationalist, and Islamist narratives. Rather, one finds dramatic regional differences, even within the same cultural zone, in the ways that family was understood, organized, and reproduced. In his comparative examination of the property devolution strategies and gender regimes in the context of local political economies, Doumani offers a groundbreaking examination of ordinary people and how they shaped the modern Middle East.

Beshara Doumani is a Professor of History and Director of Middle East Studies at Brown University. His research focuses on groups, places, and time periods marginalized by mainstream scholarship on the early modern and modern Middle East. He also writes on the topics of displacement, academic freedom, politics of knowledge production, and the Palestinian condition. His books include Family Life in the Ottoman Mediterranean: A Social HistoryRediscovering Palestine: Merchants and Peasants in Jabal Nablus, 1700-1900Academic Freedom After September 11 (editor), and Family History in the Middle East: Household, Property and Gender (editor). He is the editor of a book series, New Directions in Palestinian Studies, with the University of California Press.

Contact: Liz Flanagan

See also: TurkeyHistorySohbet-i Osmani2017-18