The Disciplined Past…

This week at Harvard


An upcoming symposium at the Mahindra Humanities Center at Harvard, where I did my post-doc, seeks to re-evaluate and re-contextualize the study, representation, and nomenclature of the Middle East–in the academy and museums.

Finally, the naming of university departments throughout the world tells a story of its own: How religious does the Middle East have to be in order to be studied as the “science of Islam” (Islamwissenschaft)? How universal to be simply “oriental”? How ancient does the Near East have to be in order to be “Near”? How ancient Western Asia in order to be “Western”? How modern the Middle East, in order to be in the “Middle”? How much in the middle does the East have to be in order to be “modern”? The symposium seeks to bring historians of the modern Middle East, scholars of the ancient Near East, Egypt and Western Asia, archaeologists, anthropologists, historians of science and of archaeology, as well as historians of Islamic and Western art in dialogue with one another to assess the current states of affair.

For more information on this symposium, please click here.

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