Spring 2024 Anthropology UN3933 section 001

ARABIA IMAGINED

Call Number 15099
Day & Time
Location
M 10:10am-12:00pm
To be announced
Points 4
Grading Mode Standard
Approvals Required Instructor
Instructor Brinkley Messick
Type SEMINAR
Course Description

As the site of the 7th century revelation of the Quran and the present day location of the sacred precincts of Islam, Arabia is the direction of prayer for Muslims worldwide and the main destination for pilgrimage. Arabia also provides a frame for diverse modes of thought and practice and for cultural expression ranging from the venerable literature of the 1001 Nights to the academic disciplines of Islam and contemporary social media, such as Twitter.

We thus will approach Arabia as a global phenomenon, as a matter of both geographic relations and the imagination. While offering an introduction to contemporary anthropological research, the course will engage in a critical review of related western conceptions, starting with an opening discussion of racism and Islamophobia. In the format of a Global Core course, the weekly assignments are organized around English translations of Arabic texts, read in conjunction with recent studies by anthropologists.   

Web Site Vergil
Department Anthropology
Enrollment 5 students (30 max) as of 11:44PM Monday, June 16, 2025
Subject Anthropology
Number UN3933
Section 001
Division Interschool
Campus Morningside
Note This course counts towards the Global Core requirement
Section key 20241ANTH3933V001