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Distinguished Lectureship Program
The MESA Lectureship Program is an excellent
way to bring an outstanding scholar to speak at your institution.
Started in 2003, the Lectureship Program includes speakers
who have made major contributions to Middle East studies.
The individuals listed below have agreed
to give one lecture in the 2007-2008 academic year on behalf
of MESA. Host institutions pay a $1,000 lectureship fee directly
to MESA, in addition to the speaker’s travel and lodging
expenses.
To Schedule A Lecturer
If you, or an institution you know, would
like to arrange a lecture please contact Nadia Hlibka (nhlibka@u.arizona.edu
or 520 621-5850). Please be certain to include which lecturer
you would like to invite, and possible dates. In some cases
scholars may be willing to speak on topics other than those
listed here. The earlier the arrangements are made the better
your chance of obtaining the speaker of your choice. Please
do not contact lecturers directly.
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Dina Rizk Khoury,
George Washington University
Dina Rizk Khoury
is Associate Professor of History and International
Affairs at George Washington University. She received
her B.A. from the American University of Beirut and
her PhD in History from Georgetown University.
Sample lecture topics
War and Memory in Iraq
Teaching Iraqi History
Popular Politics in the Early Modern Middle East
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Leslie Peirce,
University of California, Berkeley
Leslie Peirce
received her MA in Middle East Studies from Harvard
University, and a PhD in Near Eastern Studies from Princeton
University. Peirce taught at Cornell for ten years,
until moving to Berkeley in 1998. Her interests are
Ottoman society and politics in the pre-modern period,
and she generally places women at the center of her
work, to see what politics and social processes look
like from that vantage point. Peirce is the author of
two books: The Imperial Harem: Women and Sovereignty
in the Ottoman Empire, Oxford University Press,
1993 (winner of the Turkish Studies Association book
prize); Morality Tales: Law and Gender in the Ottoman
Court of Aintab, California University Press, 2003.
Sample lecture topics
Power and Politics in the Ottoman Imperial Harem
Women and Islamic Law in the Pre-modern Middle East |
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Donald M. Reid,
Georgia State University
Donald Reid
is Professor of History at Georgia State University
and author of Whose Pharaohs? Archaeology, Museums,
and Egyptian National Identity from Napoleon to World
War I; Cairo University and The Making of Modern Egypt;
and Lawyers and Politics in the Arab World, 1880-1990.
Sample lecture topics
Whose Pharaohs? Museums, Archaeology, and
Modern Egyptian National Identity
Egyptian-American Encounters from Muhammad
Ali
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John O. Voll,
Georgetown University
John Voll is
the director of the Center for Muslim-Christian Understanding
and professor of Islamic history at Georgetown University.
He is the author of Islam: Continuity and Change in
the Modern World and co-author (with John L. Esposito)
of Islam and Democracy and Makers of Contemporary Islam
and is author, co-author, or editor of eight other volumes.
He has taught Islamic, Middle Eastern, and world history
at the University of New Hampshire and Georgetown University,
and has written on movements of Islamic renewal in the
modern and contemporary eras.
Sample lecture topics
I have given
lectures recently that cover topics with titles like
"Barbie Dolls and Terrorism: Old Conflicts &
New Identities," "What does Bin Ladin Really
Say and What Can We Do About It?", "Big Macs
& al-Qa'idah: The Franchising of Terrorism,"
"Beyond Crusades & Jihads."
Transnational Islamic Networks: Contemporary and Historic
After Political Islam: Movements and Ideologies in the
Post-Islamist Era
Muslim-Christian Relations in World History
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