CONGRATS | Tareq Awwad Visiting Fellow at CGC | Amman Translates GS Alumnus’ Revolutionary Harris Matrix

The Harris Matrix, invented by alumnus Dr. Edward Cecil Harris ’71GS, continues to play an important role in archaeology, and has recently been translated into Arabic by Baraa Seraj Eddin and Tareq Awwad, a visiting fellow at the Columbia Global Center in Amman. Learn more about The Harris Matrix here.

Awwad, who worked on the Arabic translation of the book, is an archaeologist with an MA in the Ancient Near East from the Lebanese University and a BA in archaeology from Damascus University. Awwad has diverse research interests in archaeological methodology and public archeology. He participated in archaeological excavations in Syria and Lebanon with several institutes, including the Directorate-General of Antiquities and Museums of Syria, the Institut Français du Proche-Orient, and the University of Balamand. He was also involved in archaeological surveys in 2019 with the Honor Frost Foundation.  

Currently, Awwad is a 2021-2022 visiting fellow at the Columbia Global Center in Amman. His research explores the nature of the relationship between Syrian communities and archeological sites and the historical, political, economic, and current societal views on the issue of archeology. His research is being mentored by Dr. Brian Boyd of Columbia University’s Department of Anthropology.

Read the full announcement on the School of General Studies website, here.

WATCH | New LOVE & INTIMACY videos from 'Palestine, IN-BETWEEN'

 
Intro graphic by Ashay Bhave

Intro graphic by Ashay Bhave

 

WEEK 4:

AYA & NADA

In this episode, we meet Aya, 22, and Nada, 22. Aya is a Palestinian-American who grew up in the US and Jordan, and Nada is Palestinian-Emirati and grew up in the UAE. The duo met at NYU Abu Dhabi, where this interview takes place. Interviewing each other, they discuss how you know you're Palestinian if you've never been, the decision and narrative around removing the hijab, reputation as a limitation of love, how community love and independence complement each other, prioritizing mental health, chosen family, and pleasure beyond sexual satisfaction.

 
 

NADA & HANA

In this episode, we meet Nada, 24, and Hana, 24. Nada and Hana grew up in Amman together and share a 16-year friendship. Interviewing each other, they discuss being Palestinian and never having visited Palestine, claiming their Palestinianness in diaspora, the challenges of finding community outside of Jordan, the hardest part of themselves to love, confronting pain and discomfort to heal generational trauma, and how their families view love and intimacy across generations.

 
 

As part of 'Palestine, IN-BETWEEN', we present the LOVE & INTIMACY video series. Over the course of the next several weeks, we’ll be releasing short films that center intergenerational outlooks on love and intimacy in Palestine and the diaspora, with discussions highlighting—but not limited to— disconnects, desires, relationships, trauma, teaching, learning, and beyond. This series includes intimate interviews and conversations held between Palestinians who share a close relationship, including old friends, parents and children, grandparents and grandchildren, lovers, cousins, and more. 

Conversations explore what has been inherited and what is being shed, as well as the ways in which taking care of ourselves and each other is to care for the collective—now and into the future. Dialogue moves beyond topics of love in the human-to-human sense, extending to the deep connections one shares with an object, time, smell, memory, land, and ritual. 

For descriptions and links to all of the videos in this series, click here.


'Palestine, IN-BETWEEN' is presented by CPS + LIFTA with Lena Mansour and Cher Asad with support from The Society of Fellows and Heyman Center for the Humanities, the Center for Archaeology at Columbia University and the Columbia Global Center | Amman.

READ | "Pedagogies of Becoming" by Naye Idriss, Columbia '20

Graffiti of Ghassan Kanafani outside the Ghassan Kanafani Cultural Center in Beddawi refugee camp, Lebanon.

Graffiti of Ghassan Kanafani outside the Ghassan Kanafani Cultural Center in Beddawi refugee camp, Lebanon.

What can Palestinian children living in the refugee camps learn about the meaning and practice of resistance from reading an indigenous canon?

“Pedagogies of Becoming” is an except of Naye Idriss’s senior thesis which won the 2020 MES Graduate Student Paper Prize.

Naye Idriss graduated from Columbia University in 2020 with a double-majored in Comparative Literature and Anthropology. In Fall 2021, she will begin her MA in Near Eastern Studies at NYU’s Hagop Kevorkian Center.

Citation:
Idriss, Naye. 2021. “Pedagogies of Becoming.” Anthropology News website, August 26, 2021.

Insaniyyat Talks: Fall 2021

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Insaniyyat | Society of Palestinian Anthropologists announces its Fall 2021 Talks. This series of meetings will be delivered in a format of seminar talks that will include a lecture and a discussion afterwards. The series will bring Insaniyyat members and other anthropologists into conversation about recent ethnographic research in/on Palestine, and beyond. Lectures will be delivered in either English or Arabic, according to the preference of each speaker. All meetings will be conducted online to allow broad participation. Interested friends from other disciplines are also welcome to join.

Updated zoom links can be found here. Write to Insaniyyat at mail@insaniyyat.org if you would like to be in touch or if you have any questions or suggestions.


Gaza as Southern Palestine
غزة، فلسطين الجنوبية

 Wednesday 8th September, 6 p.m (Palestine time) – Hadeel Assali 

Abstract: In this talk, anthropologist Hadeel Assali (PhD, Anthropology, Columbia University) argues for the geographical unmapping of the Gaza Strip through both historical and ethnographic study. Rather than taking the territorial entity for granted, ethnography and history instead bring into relief a geography of Gaza that is much more broad, which Assali refers to as Southern Palestine. Dominant and even critical discourses have kept Gaza trapped in "the Gaza Strip" while focusing almost solely on Israeli techniques of domination. However, the framework of "relational place-making" allows us to center and amplify Palestinians in Gaza as active agents in shaping and reshaping the world (and the material earth) around them.

For info on how to attend this session with Hadeel Assali and to read the abstracts of future sessions, visit the link below.

CONGRATS | Lila Abu-Lughod wins 2021 GAD Prize for Exemplary Cross-Field Scholarship

Lila Abu-Lughod (Columbia University) is the 2021 winner of the GAD Prize for Exemplary Cross-Field Scholarship for her article, “Imagining Palestine’s Alter-Natives: Settler Colonialism and Museum Politics” (2020) in Critical Inquiry 47 (Autumn): 1-27.

This essay is an anthropologist’s reflections on Palestine’s political impasses in relation to the experiences of other colonized places and people. It was inspired by the current ferment in critical indigenous and native studies, and now Palestinian studies, around the framework of settler colonialism. Tracing the promises and pitfalls of new imaginations of sovereignty and self-determination emerging through indigenous activism—in contrast to the previous forms of anti-colonial nationalism—the essay reflects on museum politics and contested rituals of liberal recognition in North America and Australia to highlight both the stark differences in the situations of Palestinians under Israeli rule and the radical significance of the efflorescence of Palestinian cultural projects. Focusing particularly on the history of the Palestinian Museum in Birzeit that was conceived in 1999 but opened in 2016, the essay argues that the productivity of the settler colonial framework may lie in the new solidarities it engenders and its potential to burst open the Palestinian political imagination. Recent debates about the ethics of repatriation from colonial museums, for example, suggest new ways that a Palestinian museum could challenge Israeli rule by highlighting state appropriation of archeological heritage.

About the Cross-Field Award
The General Anthropology Division (GAD) has long supported innovative scholarship that transcends the seemingly all too rigid boundaries that divide the various fields of anthropology.

The Cross-Field Award is awarded annually by GAD for a peer-reviewed journal article published in the preceding three years that demonstrates exemplary scholarship from any theoretical or methodological perspective including applied research that transcends two or more fields of anthropology, broadly construed, or is interdisciplinary in nature. 

For more info, click here.

READ | Call for Applications to Graduate Student Fellowship

The Society of Fellows and Heyman Center for the Humanities (SOF/Heyman) and the Center for Palestine Studies (CPS) invite applications from graduate students at Columbia University for a Public Humanities Fellowship in support of the NO PLACE | LA MAKAN | لا مكان Radio Play Project.

The NO PLACE | LA MAKAN | لا مكان program will commission, develop, translate, produce, and distribute four new radio plays by Palestinian playwrights in 2021-2022, culminating in two fully-realized radio productions of each play (one in Arabic and one in English). The production process will take place simultaneously at Columbia University in New York City as well as at Al-Qattan Cultural Centre in Ramallah, Palestine. The plays will be broadcast in 2022 as part of a month-long festival celebrating this work, alongside conversations, interviews, and events exploring the work's conception and the lived realities out of which it was born. The recordings will be archived on the Center for Palestine Studies website, released as part of an ongoing podcast series, and broadcast worldwide on WKCR 89.9 FM, Columbia University's radio station, as well as through partners in Palestine and around the world. A series of ancillary events will build skills in writing and producing within the audio medium and be open to the public.

The Public Humanities Radio Play Fellow will work closely with members of the LA MAKAN team as they develop and produce four new radio plays by Palestinian playwrights.

The fellowship term will run from September 2021 - April 2022 and the fellow will receive a stipend of $4000. For more details and information about eligibility and how to apply, visit the link below.

All applications must be submitted by 6 September 2021.

To learn more about the Center's NO PLACE | LA MAKAN | لا مكان program, including information about this season's commissioned playwrights, ancillary programing and partners, click here.

NO PLACE | LA MAKAN | لا مكان is a project of the Center for Palestine Studies produced in partnership with the A. M. Qattan Foundation, with support from Taawon, The Tides Foundation, and the Society of Fellows and Heyman Center for the Humanities at Columbia University.

READ | NO PLACE / LA MAKAN Press Release in Arabic

مركز-الدراسات-الفلسطينية-في-جامعة-كولومبيا-يطلق-مشروع-لا-مكان-برنامج-المسرح-الإذاعي-للكتّاب-الفلسطينيين-مؤسسة-عبد-المحسن-القطان.png

Read the press release on the A.M. Qattan Foundation’s website here.


NO PLACE | LA MAKAN | لا مكان is a project of the Center for Palestine Studies produced in partnership with the A. M. Qattan Foundation, with support from Taawon, The Tides Foundation, and the Society of Fellows and Heyman Center for the Humanities at Columbia University.

WATCH | New Videos in LOVE & INTIMACY series

As part of 'Palestine, IN-BETWEEN', CPS x LIFTA presents a LOVE & INTIMACY video series. These short films center intergenerational outlooks on love and intimacy in Palestine and the diaspora, with discussions highlighting—but not limited to— disconnects, desires, relationships, trauma, teaching, learning, and beyond. This series includes intimate interviews and conversations held between Palestinians who share a close relationship, including old friends, parents and children, grandparents and grandchildren, lovers, cousins, and more. Conversations explore what has been inherited and what is being shed, as well as the ways in which taking care of ourselves and each other is to care for the collective—now and into the future. Dialogue moves beyond topics of love in the human-to-human sense, extending to the deep connections one shares with an object, time, smell, memory, land, and ritual. This week we share conversations held between Leena and Nour, Marcelo and Constantino, and Justin and Elie. We’d like to thank all who participated in this series for your time, energy, and openness. You can watch the videos and follow the series on palestineinbetween.com, a blog and accompanying website to this program where we will be sharing original content and reposting content by Palestinians all over the world.

Intro graphic by Ashay Bhave. Spanish to English translation by Karime Sierra.


'Palestine, IN-BETWEEN' is presented by CPS + LIFTA with Lena Mansour and Cher Asad with support from The Society of Fellows and Heyman Center for the Humanities, the Center for Archaeology at Columbia University and the Columbia Global Center | Amman.