1.Call for Papers – English Issue of the Biannual Journal of Metaphysical Investigations
We are pleased to announce that the Biannual Journal of Metaphysical Investigations, a peer-reviewed scientific journal (Grade B, Philosophy Department, Kharazmi University, Tehran, Iran and indexed in some databases including google scholar, Academia, ISC (Islamic Science Citation), Noormags, Sid, Philosophers’ Index, etc.), after publishing eleven issues in Persian, has now received authorization from Iran’s ministry of Science, Research and Technology to publish one issue per year in English. Accordingly, we cordially invite esteemed scholars to submit their valuable, scholarly articles in all areas of philosophy in English for consideration in this special English-language issue. For further information and submission guidelines, please contact the Editor-in-Chief via email at qorbani48@gmail.com.
The website of the journal is:
https://mi.khu.ac.ir/index.php?slc_lang=en&sid=1
Qodratollah Qorbani
Editor-in-Chief
2. Call for Papers – “Figures of Authority. Argumentative Strategies, Exemplary Motifs, and Narrative Patterns in the Political Advice Literature of the Premodern Islamic World”, University of Tübingen, 15–16 June 2026
The workshop will investigate the rhetorical, narrative, and exemplary
devices through which political advice literature in Arabic, Persian,
and Turkish articulated authority across the premodern Islamic world.
From the circle of justice to the metaphor of the lion-king, from
Aristotle’s words of advice to Alexander to the anecdotes on
Anūshirwān’s court, from the motif of light to signify the ruler’s
authority as guarantor of rights and duties by dispelling obscurity to
the Qurʾānic notion of God as mālik al-mulk (Q. 3:26), from the
sisterhood of religion and kingship to the body-and-organs metaphor
that explains the hierarchical structure of the polity—the repertoire
of political advice literature abounds with recurring allegories,
exemplary figures and narratives that both reflect and shape political
discourse across centuries. Rather than treating these elements as
accessory or stereotypical devices, the aim is to examine how they
operate as integral parts of political reasoning and as powerful
vehicles for specific messages, adapted to different contexts and
audiences.
We welcome proposals from scholars at all career stages.
We invite proposals for papers that address, among others, the following themes:
tools within individual works or in a comparative approach
undergo
sources
political authority
Please submit an abstract of no more than 300 words, including a select bibliography
and a short CV, by 15 December 2025 to marianna.zarantonello@unituebingen .
de.
Notifications of acceptance will be sent out by 15 January 2026.
Travel and accommodation expenses will be covered according to budget availability; further details will be provided upon acceptance.
3. International Conference on: Arabic Literature and World: Towards a Universal Dialogue between Self and Other
| The Moroccan Comparative Literature Association (MCLA)
Organizes, in collaboration with The Faculty of Letters & Human Sciences, Ibn-Zohr University, An International Conference On Arabic Literature and World: Towards a Universal Dialogue between Self and Other In Partnership with ICLA Research Committee on Arabic Comparative Literature; AWEJ for Translation and Literary Studies (AWEJTLS); And The Comparative Literature & Society Research Group (CL@S) of the Comparative Humanities and Applied Language Studies Lab (CHALS) Space of Humanities, Faculty of Letters & Human Sciences, Ibn-Zohr University – Agadir, Morocco 16–18 April, 2026 Selected papers of the conference will be published in AWEJ for Translation and Literary Studies (https://www.awej-tls.org/ ). The paper should be in the English language. We kindly ask the authors to register and submit their paper according to the submission guidelines https://www.awej-tls.org/paper-submission/. Please send the final paper in a Word file as an attachment to tls@awej.org by January 30, 2026. Each paper should include: full name, full affiliation, Email address, ORCID ID, and an abstract (150-250 words). For the full call for papers, please click here Download the full call for papers Kind regards, |
4. The Department of History at Georgetown University invites applications for a tenure-track position at the rank of Assistant Professor in the history of the Persianate World from the Muslim conquest to the present, to begin in August 2026.
https://apply.interfolio.com/174364
Deadline: 30 October, 2025
5. January 6 – 15, 2026 | Cambridge, UK
Learn to Read and Analyse Early Christian Arabic Texts
From the early Middle Ages, Christian Arabs have made profound contributions to biblical scholarship, theology, poetry, and history. This winter school invites you to begin reading these remarkable texts for yourself — many of which remain unpublished and underexplored.
Designed for those with at least one year of Arabic study (Classical or Modern Standard), this course offers a gateway into a world of forgotten manuscripts and fresh scholarly discovery.
https://www.westminster.cam.ac.uk/biblical-languages/christian-arabic-2026
6. The International Journal of Islamic Architectureis pleased to announce the call for submissions for the 2026 Professor Hasan-Uddin Khan Article Award.
In honour of Professor Hasan-Uddin Khan’s contributions to the field of Islamic architecture, the International Journal of Islamic Architecture (IJIA) offers this award in recognition of ground-breaking scholarship on the subject published in peer-reviewed journals. The criteria on which papers will be judged are: innovation in approach(es) to posed research question(s), originality, written clarity and style, and the overall impact on research in the field. Articles should provide new insights into the field, making a distinct or significant scholarly contribution to the understanding of architecture, architectural heritage, and the built environment in the Islamic world (both historic and contemporary), especially in marginalized geographies. This award, offered every two years, is judged by a jury that includes three members of the academic community. The third award will be given in 2026 and we are delighted that Professors Doris Behrens-Abouseif, Finbarr Barry Flood, and Attilio Petruccioli will serve on the jury. Papers published in English in a peer reviewed journal in 2024 or 2025 will be eligible for this round of the award.
Nominations should be submitted by scholars or journal editors to the chair of the award, IJIA Associate Editor Dr Mehreen Chida-Razvi, at HUKaward@gmail.com by 16 November 2025. Self-nominations are permitted, of a single article. The nominations should include a PDF of the published paper, full details of publication, and the author’s affiliation and contact information. The winner and runner-up will be announced in March 2026 on the IJIA website, social media platforms, and in the journal’s July issue. The winner will receive a cash prize of $1000 and a two-year subscription to IJIA; the runner-up will receive a two-year subscription to IJIA.
7. 2026 BRISMES Conference
The 2026 BRISMES Annual Conference will be hosted by the Middle East Institute at the School of Oriental and African Studies in London, between 23-25 June 2026. The conference theme and call for papers will be announced soon. Please stay tuned!
8. From Subordination to Revolution: A Gramscian Theory of Popular Mobilization
John Chalcraft
At a time of mass discontent, revolutionary weakness, and right-wing ascendancy, John Chalcraft presents a new theory of popular mobilization. From Subordination to Revolution is based on an innovative reading of the living Gramscian tradition, and it offers an alternative to conservative, liberal, Marxist, and poststructuralist theory. Drawing on examples from across the globe, Chalcraft defines popular mobilization as the many ways in which subordinated groups rearrange their relationships to challenge and overcome domination.
Book Launch: LSE, 15.10.25, 5.30 UK time
https://www.lse.ac.uk/government/events/2025/Thinking-Popular-Mobilization-with-Gramsci
9. Fellowship in the History of Visual Culture in the Ottoman Empire
University of Oxford
The Khalili Research Centre for the History of the Art and Material Culture of the Middle East and Wolfson College, University of Oxford, invite applications for a Fellowship in the History of Visual Culture in the Ottoman Empire. This will offer a scholar an exceptional opportunity to carry out research on a major, largely unpublished assemblage of artworks: the Celsing Collection. Both early career and senior researchers are invited to apply.
Deadline | 3 October 2025
10. Lecturer (Teaching) in Middle East Politics
School of Oriental and African Studies
The role holder will be expected to contribute to the Department’s undergraduate and postgraduate degrees. They will convene and teach both general and specialist in-person modules, convene online and distance learning modules, advise both undergraduate and postgraduate dissertations, provide pastoral care for students, and contribute to administrative roles as needed.
Deadline | 12 October 2025
11. 5 Positions as Research Associate and Visiting Faculty in the “Women’s Studies in the Religion Program”
Harvard Divinity School
Proposals for book-length research projects using both religion and gender as central categories of analysis are welcomed. They may address women and religion in any time, place, or religious tradition, and may utilize disciplinary and interdisciplinary approaches from across the fields of theology, the humanities, and the social sciences. Positions are open to candidates with doctorates in the fields of religion and to those with primary competence in other humanities, social science, and public policy fields.
Deadline | 15 October 2025
12. New Graduate Programme in Middle East Public History
North Carolina State University is proud to announce the launch of a new Graduate program (MA & PhD) in Middle East Public History, beginning in Fall 2026. This innovative program is the first of this kind in the world, designed to prepare scholars who combine rigorous historical research with public engagement and digital humanities practices. The program brings together outstanding Middle East history scholars, whose expertise spans the late Ottoman Empire, colonial and post-colonial transformations, migration and diaspora, gender and labor, and the modern Middle East. Faculty are committed to mentoring students in both traditional scholarship and new approaches to public history. Anchoring the program is the Khayrallah Center for Lebanese Diaspora Studies, the world’s leading institute dedicated to the study of Middle East diasporas. Students will have unique opportunities to work with one of the largest digital archives of Arab migration and heritage, gaining hands-on experience in archive, digital humanities, oral history, public exhibits, and collaborative research.
Deadline | 31 January 2026
13. Two Islamic medicine talks coming up:
In Ibn Al-Nafis’ Shadow
Transformations in Medical Theory in Islamic Societies (1200-1520)
Nahyan Fancy
Webinar: 7 October 2025 – 5 pm (CEST)
Nahyan Fancy shows how Ibn al-Nafīs advanced medical theory beyond the works of Galen, Aristotle and even earlier Islamic physicians through his commentaries on Avicenna’s Canon of Medicine and its abridgements. Examining four commentaries on the Canon plus four on its Epitome, this lecture argues that post-classical practices of taḥqīq (verification) – lexical, philosophical, empirical – played a key role in assessing, revising or rejecting inherited theoretical frameworks.
The Arabic and Latin Science of Compound Medicaments
A New Reading of Book Ten of the «Practica Pantegni»
Anna Gili
Webinar: 11 November 2025 – 5 pm (CEST)
This lecture explores the Arabic and Latin traditions of compound medicaments through al-Maǧūsī’s Kitāb al-Malakī and its Latin translation in Constantine the African’s Practica Pantegni. It highlights how al-Maǧūsī framed antidotes as essential tools in the contest between disease and nature, and how Constantine reshaped this material into a more philosophically charged discussion enriched with earlier Latin learning. At its centre lies Book X of the Practica Pantegni, read as a distinctive synthesis at the crossroads of Arabic and Latin medicine.
https://www.jstor.org/stable/10.3366/jj.27775799.13?seq=1
in Analytic Islamic Epistemology: Critical Debates, Edited by Safaruk Chowdhury, Ramon Harvey, Edinburgh, 2025, pp. 173-194 (22 pages)
1. Invisible East
Invisible East’s Digital Corpus 2.0 & 6th launch of documents
The 2.0 version of the Invisible East Digital Corpus (IEDC) which will be officially launched on 13 October! The digitisation team, with Ed, Mateen and Mike Allaway, have improved our user and search experience; added the ability to download the texts in Word and JSON (XML to be added soon); and, vitally, have produced a Persian language version of the website. Your feedback on this new and improved IEDC before the launch would be very welcome: please let us know what does and doesn’t work for you. The launch will be accompanied by a sixth release of documents, bringing us up to nearly 1,300 texts in the digital corpus
One of the central aims of our project has been to enable digital repatriation – ensuring that manuscripts and documents held in collections around the world can be studied and engaged with in the regions from which they came. With this new Persian language functionality we hope to open up new avenues for engagement and collaboration and to encourage more people to explore and work with these remarkable documents.
2. CfP: Research Seminar on Reproductive Ethics and Kindship (Doha, Jan 2027)
3. Bloomsbury: Lisa Nielson, author of Music and Musicians in the Medieval Islamicate World: A Social History, talks to Morteza Hajizadeh in this podcast from New Books Network.
4. IHF ACADEMIC COMMITTEE ANNOUNCEMENT
The second cycle of the Iran Heritage Foundation’s 2025 grant programme, with the deadline of 31 October 2025, is now open for receipt of application. With the overall aim of fostering knowledge and appreciation of Iran’s rich cultural heritage research grants in various academic disciplines are awarded.
Preference will be given to applications on (in alphabetical order) archaeology, architecture, art, history, linguistics and literature, as well as subjects of contemporary interest, such as cinema, music, sociology and so on; applications from other disciplines will also be considered.
Projects to be supported may include the most varied academic initiatives, from fieldwork to workshops, conferences, building databases and digitising images. The Committee privileges ground-breaking research, which may include editions and translations of key texts. In order to support multiple initiatives grants of up to a maximum of £3,000 will be considered. The application process and conditions for the grants can be viewed on our website.
To apply please click here
For Terms and Conditions please click here
5. Online Monday Majlises organised by the Centre for the Study of Islam, Institute of Arab and Islamic Studies, University of Exeter
John Esposito, Among the Believers: A Journey in Islam, the Muslim World and Global Politics
https://universityofexeter.zoom.us/meeting/register/uMZuYLICSDqMH2gQW3IwCA
13th of October (Monday) 17:00-18:30 (UK time).
Said Reza Huseini, The Arab Conquests in Bactria: Local Politics and Arab Domination (651–750 CE)
https://Universityofexeter.zoom.us/meeting/register/4qcbR_CRQ2miDRV35B6zPw
20th of October (Monday) 17:00-18:30 (UK time).
Gabriel Said Reynolds, A Faithful Dog and a Clay Bird: The Qur’an in Its Christian World
https://Universityofexeter.zoom.us/meeting/register/3uYLlGdRRcGlh0sgg2JnOw
27th of October (Monday) 17:00-18:30 (UK time).
Badr Tachouche, The Chanting Faqihs: Retuning Islamic Discourse through Muwashshahs and Zajals
https://Universityofexeter.zoom.us/meeting/register/eApkGIWNRlm18Ff1SlXKEg
3rd of November (Monday) 17:00-18:30 (UK time).
Michael Shenkar, Sogdian Civilisation and the Arab Conquest.
https://Universityofexeter.zoom.us/meeting/register/I4D-2AlYTDSPJ6hkQpmuLw
10th of November (Monday) 17:00-18:30 (UK time).
Godefroid de Callataÿ and Laura Tribuzio, A Ruby Which Is Not a Ruby: Symbol, Substance, and Political Imagination in Timurid and Mughal Thought.
https://Universityofexeter.zoom.us/meeting/register/m2hq7EbfSBSoC1dFFG3X8g
17th of November (Monday) 17:00-18:30 (UK time).
Edith Szanto, Mourning and Performing: Twelver Shi‘ism in Ba‘ath Syria
https://Universityofexeter.zoom.us/meeting/register/U4Yl0PCMRYS7s9x-wO4f2A
24th of November (Monday) 17:00-18:30 (UK time).
Safa Mahmoudian, Palace Gardens in Lower Mesopotamia: 8th–11th Centuries
https://Universityofexeter.zoom.us/meeting/register/nvNXpR70Q_i_ZQ1-12kDdw
1st of December (Monday) 17:00-18:30 (UK time).
Pranav Prakash, Exploring the Raison d’Être of the Oldest Dated and Illustrated Manuscript of a Persian Translation of Śiva Purāṇa
https://universityofexeter.zoom.us/meeting/register/s6Vjx5M6RZ-cYqGJGOdkZw
8th of December (Monday) 17:00-18:30 (UK time).
Alireza Doostdar, Facing Satan: The Iranian Revolution and Its Demons
https://Universityofexeter.zoom.us/meeting/register/n-wjuscLTkazo1TgWSQgsQ
In the spirit of the label ‘Majlis’ and also to make the talks even more interesting, our speakers present the topic discussed as embedded in their own journey. You can watch the previous Majlises, since October 2022, here https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL8YRkUahFj_81oJzCSDLTx4kVQQgeHLc-, but we don’t record the Q&A in order to keep the discussion free. Please come and enjoy the talks and the discussions : )
If you’d like to be included in the CSI (Centre for the Study of Islam, Institute of Arab and Islamic Studies, University of Exeter) mailing list, please write to I.T.Kristo-Nagy@ex.ac.uk
6. NEW PUBLICATION, available for pre-order now
Elegies of the Earth: Selected Poems by Ahmad Shamlou
Edited and Translated from Persian by Niloufar Talebi
(World Poetry Books, Fall 2025)
7. Exhibition – Mamluks: Legacy of an Empire
he second venue of the Mamluks exhibition presented at the Louvre Abu Dhabi: Mamluks. Legacy of an Empire.
This is a slightly reviewed version of the first venue presented at the Musée du Louvre from 30 April to 28 July 2025.
This second venue is accompanied with a shortened catalogue, edited by Carine Juvin, gathering five introductory essays by Doris Behrens-Abouseif, Carine Juvin, Souraya Noujaim, Nasser Rabbat and Élodie Vigouroux, as well as short entries by numerous specialists (available in English, Arabic and French).
Contact Information
Dr Carine Juvin
Curator of Medieval Near East Collections
Louvre Museum – Paris
Contact Email
8. CALL FOR PROPOSALS: ACLA Seminar “Rethinking Literature’s Persons”
Deadline: Proposals must be submitted by October 2nd, via the ACLA website
The ACLA conference is Feb 26 to March 1 in Montreal.
Co-organizers: Julie Orlemanski (julieorlemanski@uchicago.edu) or Samuel Fallon (fallon@geneseo.edu)
Character, person, speaker, voice: these English-language terms are at once ubiquitous elements of literary criticism and disputed ones. On the one hand, they have never seemed formal enough: caring about character has long been the sign of the sentimental reader; poetic speakers threaten to usurp, or to dissolve back into, the linguistic codes that summon them. On the other hand, such terms have never felt sufficiently historical: when we call Gilgamesh, Layla and Majnun, Hamlet, Anna Karenina, and Superman “characters,” are we really talking about the same thing at all? How responsive, or not, are literature’s anthropomorphic affordances to differing regimes of social identity? This seminar invites presentations on the formal, historical, or generic dimensions of literary persons or person-effects (including characters, narrators, lyric speakers, personifications, types, and other figures). We seek participants who will bring particular texts (or authors, or traditions) to bear on a shared comparative conversation. How might we teach one another to rethink literature’s persons?
A surge of recent scholarship suggests that these questions have gained fresh urgency. In an age of autofiction, the relation of literature to person may itself be changing: “I’m not interested in character,” Rachel Cusk said in 2018, “because I don’t think character exists anymore.” This seminar asks whether it ever did. Recent reevaluations spring as well from the still-unfolding aftermaths of New Criticism and poststructuralism. As those formalisms have aged, the interpretive habits they once instilled have grown strange. In their wake, some have celebrated the cognitive and affective realities of literary characters; others remain fascinated with the disfiguration, reification, and figural drift that a literary person can occasion. Comparative approaches, with their provincialization of received critical idioms, have further catalyzed scholarly interest. Scholars are renovating our common theoretical edifice in light of the heterogeneity of literature’s populace across time and space.
We invite proposals that link case study to concept, or otherwise suggest how a specific interpretation may yield methodological, theoretical, or historiographic transformation (“rethinking”). Organized by a medievalist and an early modernist, the seminar aspires to dialogue across subfields and language traditions and across the modern/nonmodern divide. We welcome papers on poetry and narrative alike, on topics including—how grammatical forms or literary tropes imply models of the person; literature’s relation to historically shifting socio-political regimes of personhood; what voice has to do with literary persons; the porous boundaries of the person, via the poetics of impersonality; extension of mind, feeling, and will beyond the individual or the human; and the responses, including but beyond identification, that literary persons elicit from readers.
Submit proposals via the ACLA submission site no later than October 2nd. Feel free to contact Julie Orlemanski at julieorlemanski@uchicago.edu with queries.
9. News from UCLA’s Center for Near Eastern Studies
New Data Dashboard offers insights about Iranians living outside Iran
The Center has published a public online dashboard that pulls together data on Iranians living outside of Iran. The online tool provides demographic and socioeconomic profiles of Iranian diaspora communities worldwide and is now available through the CNES website.
The dashboard is the product of several years of research conducted by Kevan Harris, associate professor of sociology at UCLA and a president of the CNES Faculty Advisory Committee, and his graduate students. Read more here.
Sohaib Baig writes about manuscripts endowed by Muslim women at UCLA Library Special Collections
UCLA Library stewards the second-largest Islamicate and Arabic-script manuscript collection in North America. Through its ongoing Islamicate Manuscript Initiative, the Library and its partners are working to individually describe and conserve thousands of manuscripts within its collection to make them accessible to scholars and the broader public. This article, co-authored by Sohaib Baig, a MENA librarian and CNES Faculty Advisory Committee Member, highlights the practice of Muslim women endowing individual manuscripts, and introduces examples of these manuscripts held in UCLA Library Special Collections. Read more here.
Surveying the Nile: Scholarly Misaha Manuals in Late Ottoman Egypt
A lecture by Samaa Elimam (UCLA)
Thursday, October 23, 2025
3:30 PM – 5:30 PM
Bunche Hall 10383
Manuscripts in Arabic Script at UCLA: Where Did They Come From?
A workshop featuring Nir Shafir (UCSD), Garret Davidson (College of Charleston), Kathryn Babayan (University of Michigan), Khalil Afzali (UCLA) and Taha Tuna Kaya (UC Davis)
Faculty organizer and moderator: Luke Yarbrough (UCLA)
Organized by UCLA Center for Near Eastern Studies. Co-sponsored by UCLA Center for Early Global Studies, UCLA Dean of Humanities, UCLA Islamic Studies, and UCLA Library
Monday, November 17, 2025
9:30 AM
Charles Young Research Library Conference Room
The Dawn is Too Far: Stories of Iranian-American Life
Film screening followed by a panel with Persis Karim (San Francisco State University) and Kevan Harris (UCLA), and a reception.
Organized by the Fowler Museum at UCLA. Co-sponsored by UCLA Center for Near Eastern Studies.
Wednesday, October 15, 2025
6:00 PM – 9:00 PM PST
Fowler Museum at UCLA
Female Religiosity in Central Asia: Sufi Leaders in the Persianate World
A book talk by Aziza Shanazarova (Columbia University)
Organized by UCLA Program on Central Asia. Co-sponsored by UCLA Center for Near Eastern Studies.
Wednesday, October 22, 2025
3:30 PM – 5:00 PM PST
Bunche Hall 10383
Strange Synchronicities and Familiar Parallels in Asia, 1600–1800
Conference 1: Empires of Thought (Ottoman, Mughal, and Qing Empires)
Organized by Choon Hwee Koh (UCLA), Meng Zhang (UCLA), and Abhishek Kaicker (UC Berkeley). Co-sponsored by UCLA Center for Near Eastern Studies.
Friday, December 5, 2025
11:00 AM – 4:00 PM PST
Location TBD
Call for Papers: Fifth International Conference on
Heritage / Community Languages
UCLA National Heritage Language Resource Center is inviting applications for its Fifth International Conference on Heritage / Community Languages. The two-day conference will focus on heritage and community language studies as a multidisciplinary field impacting a variety of educational contexts. Submissions from disciplines including but not limited to anthropology, demographics, linguistics, sociology, applied linguistics, policy, psychology, bilingualism, education, and assessment, are welcome.
Submission deadline: September 30, 2025
10. Analytic Islamic Epistemology: Critical Debates
Edited by Safaruk Chowdhury, Ramon Harvey
EUP, 2025
https://edinburghuniversitypress.com/book-analytic-islamic-epistemology.html
11. DeGruyterBrill
The recording of our webinar “AI and Research Integrity” is now available
12. 3rd Annual Islamic Art History Research Workshop, 5th–6th December 2025
Building on the success of the first two hybrid Islamic Art History Research Workshops, held both in-person at the University of York and online over the last two years, the third workshop, run jointly with the Persian Manuscripts Association, will take place on the 5th and 6th of December this year.
In honour of Sheila Canby, and in line with the aims of the Persian Manuscripts Association, the overarching theme will focus primarily on the material culture of the wider Iranian world in the late medieval and early modern period. However, there are no geographical, chronological or methodological restrictions for the proposals.
The event will include a keynote lecture on the 6th December (speaker TBC), and this announcement also serves as a call for paper proposals from scholars at all career stages. We welcome proposals from those who wish to attend in person in York, as well as those who prefer to present online.
The aim of combining in-person and online participation is to make the event accessible to the largest possible number of scholars and members of the public, regardless of location, and to encourage a diverse range of voices, topics, and approaches. We invite proposals for 20-minute presentations based on your current research on any aspect of Islamic art history.
The deadline for submissions is the 10th October 2025. Please indicate in your proposal whether you prefer to present online or in person. Kindly note that those attending in person on the 6th of December will be responsible for arranging their own travel and accommodation.
Please send your 150-200 word proposals to:
13. Online Talk – The Silent Margins in Ibn al-Bawwab’s Qur’an, 22.10.25
Dr Alya Karame, Cochrane Research Fellow 2025
A Qur’an manuscript copied at the turn of the eleventh century by the renowned Baghdadi calligrapher Ibn al-Bawwab has become one of the most celebrated Qur’ans in the world. With its elegant script and exceptional illumination, Ibn al-Bawwab’s Qur’an, as it is now known, has featured prominently in lectures on Islamic art and was even reproduced as a postcard by the Chester Beatty, where it is housed today. As the earliest dated Qur’an written in the newly adopted round script and on paper – a material that marked a shift away from the earlier use of parchment – its historical and aesthetic significance is undeniable. Yet, what does its elevation as a masterpiece obscure? What assumptions underlie its fame, and what conventions are reinforced in the process? By examining both the manuscript itself and its modern reception, this presentation explores what was gained, and equally, what was lost, on the road to its iconic status: from the construction of authenticity and artistic singularity to the overlooked networks of interconnectivity that shaped book culture in the medieval Islamic world.
💻 Online talk: Please register for online viewing via Zoom HERE.
https://chesterbeatty.ie/whats-on/the-silent-margins-in-ibn-al-bawwabs-quran/
14. Assistant, Associate or Full Professor in Anthropology (Focus MENA), American University in Cairo
Requirements: A PhD in Cultural Anthropology or Social-Anthropology and a demonstrable record of teaching that illustrates an ability to teach courses in the BA in Anthropology and the MA in Sociology and Anthropology programs at AUC, including those with a focus on the Middle East and North Africa, as well as courses in their area of sub-disciplinary expertise. A second regional expertise will be considered advantageous.
Deadline for applications: 15 October 2025. Information: https://tinyurl.com/yk63pj3z
15. Two Postdoctoral Associates (2 Years) in Middle Eastern History, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, MA
We seek outstanding junior scholars whose research engages Arab and/or Jewish History in the Middle East and North Africa, in any time period. We have particular interest in scholars working on Palestinian and/or Israeli history or the history of Jewish-Muslim relations. Applicants must have received a Ph.D. in History (or a related field) within the past five years.
Deadline for applications: 22 October 2025. Information: https://academicjobsonline.org/ajo/jobs/30660
16. Scholar/Visitor in Middle East History, Brigham Young University, Provo, Utah
Applications are welcome from scholars with expertise in Middle East history, preferably with a specialization in the period 600-1800 CE. Those with exceptional teaching and a strong research agenda are encouraged to apply. Salary commensurate with experience and rank.
Deadline for applications: 30 September 2025. Information: https://tinyurl.com/yc5w44ns
17. Professor of Comparative Literature (Focus Persian Literature and Culture), Stanford University
Applicants must have demonstrated a commitment to effective teaching and mentoring and the ability to maintain a world-class research program. The successful candidate must have a Ph.D. in a related field. We seek a candidate with a deep understanding of the Persian literary tradition and its relevance within interdisciplinary and comparative frameworks.
Deadline for applications: 25 October 2025. Information: https://tinyurl.com/mrxxj7rp
18. Grants of the Iran Heritage Foundation UK
Preference will be given to applications on archaeology, architecture, art, history, linguistics and literature, as well as subjects of contemporary interest, such as cinema, music, sociology and so on; applications from other disciplines will also be considered. Projects to be supported may include the most varied academic initiatives, from fieldwork to workshops, conferences, building databases and digitising images.
Deadline for applications: 22 October 2025. Information: https://ihf.org.uk/grants-tsandcs2025/
19. 33rd Islamic Republic of Iran`s World Book Award in Islamic Studies and Iranian Studies in the Categories of Authorship, Translation, and Critical Edition
Books to be considered can be in any language, while need to be on either Islamic Studies or Iranian Studies. They also have to be published (in their first edition) outside of Iran in 2024. Scholars, writers, translators, and publishers are invited to nominate book(s) for consideration.
Deadline for submissions: 22 October 2025. Information: https://tinyurl.com/462anzth
1. Invisible East
The Islamicate East series
Three books in The Islamicate East series are now listed on the EUP website and will be arriving in bookstores soon:
2. Introducing The Intensive Online Course on The Life of the Prophet Muhammad (s)
December 08 – 13, 2025
A unique opportunity to journey through the profound stages of the Prophet’s life, guided by distinguished scholars of Islamic studies.
Over six interactive sessions, we will explore how the Prophet (s) lived, struggled, and transformed the world around him, with each lecture focusing on a pivotal dimension of his mission:
📖 Course Topics:
– What Qualities in the Prophet’s Early Life Prepared Him for Prophethood?
– How Did the Prophet Receive Revelation and Face the First Waves of Opposition?
– How Did the Prophet Maintain His Mission Under Hardship and Loss?
– How Was the Migration (Hijrah) a Turning Point in Islamic Civilization?
– Battles and Strategy – What Was the Prophet’s Approach to Faith, Diplomacy, and Defense?
– What Is the Lasting Legacy of the Prophet’s Final Years?
✨ Format: 6 live online sessions with Q&A
📅 Dates: December 08 – 13, 2025
📍 Platform: Online (via Zoom)
🎓 Organized by: Sadra International Institute
This is a chance to gain deep insights into the Sirah with the guidance of some of today’s leading Muslim scholars.
🔗 Register now: https://sadrai.com/prophet-muhammad
3. ‘The Military in Safavid Iran, 1501-1736’,
R Mathhee,
In THE CAMBRIDGE HISTORY OF WAR, VOLUME III:
War and the Early Modern World
Edited by D Parrott and G Agoston, 283- 308.
4. Open Access – Music Making in Iran from the 15th to the Early 20th Century
A H Pourjavady,
EUP, 2025
5. Zoom: ASPS Virtual Event Series XV
Actors/Performers, Audience, and Narrative Strategies in Naqqāli:
New Approaches
The Japan Office of the Association for the Study of Persianate Societies and the Institute for Advanced Studies on Asia, University of Tokyo, are pleased to co-host ASPS Virtual Event Series XV: “Actors/Performers, Audience, and Narrative Strategies in Naqqāli: New Approaches,” an online workshop on naqqāli that gathers together three papers by young naqqāli scholars across the globe. This workshop explores the vast, almost uncharted terrain of naqqāli, Persian professional storytelling in terms of performance, audience, and narrative. It also offers a Shāhnāma-khvāni performance by Mohammadali Mirzaee Jadideslam who is a naqqāl.
Pre-registration is required for the participation.
Date and Time: Thursday, November 27, 2025 at 15:00 (JST)
Venue: Online via Zoom
Language: English
Pre-registration: Please complete the registration form at < https://forms.gle/YFENy7uJwiqWMix67> by November 24, 24:00 (JST). A Zoom link will be sent to all registrants by the end of the following day.
Co-organized by: Japan Office, Association for the Study of Persianate Societies (ASPS Virtual Event Series XV); Institute for Advanced Studies on Asia, University of Tokyo (Tobunken Symposium).
Contact: Naoki Nishiyama (nishiyama@ioc.u-tokyo.ac.jp)
Program
Chair: Kazuo Morimoto (ASPS Japan Office; IASA, UTokyo)
15:00-15:15: Kazuo Morimoto
Opening Remarks
15:15-15:45: Mohammdali Mirzaee Jadideslam (PhD candidate, University of Hamburg):
“Naqqāli, Narrating or Acting?”
15:45-16:15: Sara Mashayekh (PhD candidate, UC Santa Barbara)
“Audience, Performer, Venue: The Role of Spectators and the Space in Shaping Naqqāli Performances”
16:15-16:30: Shāhnāma-khvāni by Mohammad Mirzaee Jadideslam (naqqāl)
Break
16:30-17:00: Radman Rasooli Mehrabani (Independent scholar)
“Negotiating Myth and Reality: Naqqāls’ Strategies for Constructing Narrative Credibility”
17:00-17:20: Kumiko Yamamoto (ILCAA, Tokyo University of Foreign Studies)
17:20-17:45: Discussion
Abstracts:
Mohammdali Mirzaee Jadideslam, “Naqqāli, Narrating or Acting?”
Bahram Beyzaei identifies the naqqāl as an actor who embodies every character of a story alone. In line with Eric Bentley’s definition of theatre—“A impersonates B while C looks on”—naqqāli itself can be considered theatre, and the naqqāl’s performance, a form of acting. Still, a fundamental question emerges: can the naqqāl’s actions be aligned with principles established by major theatre figures such as Stanislavski, Michael Chekhov, or Grotowski? And if alignment exists, does this justify calling the practice “acting”?
To answer, a precise analysis is necessary. First, naqqāli must be examined in its earlier form, when it was closer to the act of narrating. Second, recent elements—innovations within the tradition—must be identified in order to trace their sources, evaluate their impact, and measure their integration. Only then can one assess whether this transformed version of naqqāli has merged with theatrical models, or instead taken an alternative path requiring a new classification.
In 20th-century Iran, Western theatre significantly influenced naqqāli. These influences shaped performance length, rhythm, suspense, vocal expression, and character building. Singing, costume design, and modern literature also contributed to its development. This study therefore positions naqqāli between narrating and acting, aiming to define the skills essential for the naqqāli.
Sara Mashayekh, “Audience, Performer, Venue: The Role of Spectators and the Space in Shaping Naqqāli Performances”
The relationship between the performer and the audience of a performance has long been the subject of scholarly discussions. However, the nature of the group we call “the audience” changes dramatically depending on time, place and the style of performance; naqqāli is no exception. This paper explores the nature of the relationship between the spectators of a naqqāli performance and the naqqāl who is telling the tale, as well as the influential role that the venue plays in shaping this relationship. By looking at the text of tumārs that have been left to us, as well as firsthand observations from those who have witnessed live naqqāli performances, this paper is attempting to make a series of inquiries into the power dynamic between the performers and their spectators, the level of audience’s involvement in altering the story being narrated, as well as the effect of the coffeehouse in shaping the performance.
Radman Rasooli Mehrabani “Negotiating Myth and Reality: Naqqāls’ Strategies for Constructing Narrative Credibility”
Naqqāli, a vibrant and influential performance tradition during the Safavid period, gradually declined from the late Qajar era, and its stories came under increasing criticism in the modern period, especially during the Pahlavi era. In response to these critiques, storytellers (naqqāls) sought to defend their art and enhance its credibility. To counter this, naqqāls sometimes reduced the hyperbolic elements of the stories to render the narratives more “realistic” and believable. Their responses were sometimes expressed explicitly—through interpreting and explaining the stories and by emphasizing that Ferdowsi’s poetry embodied wisdom, reason, and intellect—and at other times implicitly, through modifications within the narratives themselves. Another strategy was the modernization of the stories. Modernization not only made the tales more engaging for contemporary audiences but also functioned as a means of granting credibility. For instance, one storyteller narrated the revolt of Kāveh against Ẓaḥḥāk in a manner resembling modern political revolutions, while another claimed that the American story of Tarzan had been stolen from the tale of Goudarz’s son, yielding millions of dollars in profit abroad. A further strategy was the historicization of the Shahnameh: naqqāls sometimes turned to historical works to compare competing versions and occasionally to critique Ferdowsi’s account. One of them even claimed to be narrating the “real” history. Finally, embedding moral lessons and ethical reflections into the narratives was another strategy, widely regarded as one of the enduring values of the naqqāli tradition.
6. Indiana University’s Summer 2026 Language Workshop is now accepting applications for its intensive online Pashto program!
Online Courses
Funding Opportunities
Priority Application Deadline
Learn more and apply here: go.iu.edu/pashto-workshop
Questions? Email the Language Workshop at languageworkshop@iu.edu or join virtual office hours.
Contact Information
Kathleen Evans, Director, Indiana University Language Workshop
Contact Email
URL
http://go.iu.edu/pashto-workshop
7. Indiana University’s Summer 2026 Language Workshop is now accepting applications for its intensive online Persian program!
Online Courses
Funding Opportunities
Priority Application Deadline
Learn more and apply here: go.iu.edu/persian-workshop
Questions? Email the Language Workshop at languageworkshop@iu.edu or join virtual office hours.
Contact Information
Kathleen Evans, Director, Indiana University Language Workshop
Contact Email
URL
http://go.iu.edu/persian-workshop
8. Indiana University’s Summer 2026 Language Workshop is now accepting applications for its intensive, accelerated Arabic programs!
Online Courses
Funding Opportunities
Priority Application Deadline
Learn more and apply here: go.iu.edu/arabic-workshop
Questions? Email the Language Workshop at languageworkshop@iu.edu or join virtual office hours.
Contact Information
Kathleen Evans, Director, Indiana University Language Workshop
Contact Email
URL
http://go.iu.edu/arabic-workshop
9. Bowdoin College – Assistant Professor of Art History
https://networks.h-net.org/jobs/69128/bowdoin-college-assistant-professor-art-history
1.Spaces of Exchange: Human–Environment Interactions from the Mediterranean to the Indus (Antiquity to the Early Islamic Period)
In recent decades, transcultural history has received increasing scholarly attention, revealing the complex processes through which ideas, practices, and objects moved, adapted, and transformed across regions, religions, societies, and historical periods. This workshop brings together scholars from Assyriology, archaeology, architectural history, and cultural studies to
examine the various methodological approaches used to trace these dynamics. By focusing on the interactions between people and environments, the workshop highlights how spaces such as gardens, palaces, and agricultural landscapes became sites of cultural negotiation, where circulating practices, forms, techniques, and aesthetic tastes intersected with
local geographies, ecological conditions, and social frameworks – crossing cultural and political zones and acquiring new meanings in the process. It will also consider how the translation and circulation of knowledge, especially in scientific and medical texts, functioned as tools for reinterpretation, adaptation, and integration into new intellectual landscapes.
By drawing on a range of case studies and methodologies – from textual and material analysis to landscape archaeology as well as economic and social networks – the workshop encourages interdisciplinary dialogue on how movement, adaptation, and reinterpretation shape cultural and material landscapes.
Convenor: Dr. Safa Mahmoudian
2–3 October 2025
Venue: Department of Near Eastern Studies, Hörsaal, Campus of the University of Vienna, Courtyard 4.1
Free admission – pre-registration required (safa.mahmoudian@univie.ac.at )
URL
2. Virtual and In-Person Lecture – Indonesia’s Islamic Heritage and the Aftermath of Colonialism – Mirjam Shatanawi
Advance registration is required
Thursday, September 25 at 6:30 PM
The Institute of Fine Arts
1 East 78th Street, New York, NY 10075
and Online
To register, please use the link at:
https://ifa.nyu.edu/events/southeast-asia.html
This event, part of the series South-East Asian Connections: Art, History and Archipelagos, is supported by the Institute’s Gulnar Bosch Fund.
3. Between Two Arabic Translators
https://arablit.org/between-two-translators/
In this new monthly interview series, translator Yasmeen Hanoosh talks with talented and celebrated Arabic translators about their work, about making a living as a translator, about the politics and art of translation, about what informs their choices—on a large and small scale—and more.
4. Invisible East
The hybrid series Rethinking History: Returning Archives and Documents kicks off. Registration is essential:
5. The Institute for Advanced Studies on Asia (IASA), University of Tokyo, together with the Kakenhi Grant-in-Aid “Sunnis” and “Shiʿis”: Historical Inquiries into Confessional Identities and Mutual Perceptions” and the Japan Office of the Association for the Study of Persianate Societies (ASPS), is pleased to co-host a lecture by Professor David Lelyveld (William Paterson University, retired) entitled “A Reflection on Muslim Identities in South Asia.”
The lecture is open to the public. Please note that advance registration is required for online participation. The co-organizers look forward to your participation.
Lecture Title:
A Reflection on Muslim Identities in South Asia
Speaker:
Professor David Lelyveld (William Paterson University, retired)
Chair:
Professor Kazuo Morimoto (IASA / Japan Office, ASPS)
Date and Time:
24 October (Fri) 2025, at 18:00-19:30 (JST)
Venue:
Room 304, Institute for Advanced Studies on Asia, Hongo Campus, University of Tokyo (東京大学東洋文化研究所3階、第一会議室304), and online via Zoom
Abstract:
To what extent are the sectarian, regional, ethnic, “caste” and language identities of South Asian Muslims characteristic of historic India as opposed to other parts of the Islamic world? This discussion will concentrate on how such identity categories have been foregrounded or obscured over time with respect to the Aligarh movement, the emergence of Urdu, British social analysis, and nationalist projects. The presentation seeks to stimulate comparisons and ideas for further research.
Speaker’s Bio:
David Lelyveld is the author of Aligarh’s First Generation: Muslim Solidarity in British India (1978, reprinted 2003). His publications also deal with the social and political history of Urdu and its differentiation from Hindi. A graduate of Harvard University, he did his Ph. D at the University of Chicago. He has held faculty and administrative positions at the University of Minnesota, Columbia, and Cornell. He retired as Professor of History at William Paterson University. He lives in New York City and is presently exploring aspects of the cultural relationship between India and Japan in the early twentieth century.
How to Participate:
Pre-registration is required for online participation. Please fill in the form at https://forms.gle/Mn2z2HJ4rG78baq17 by 23 October, at 24:00 JST.
In-person attendance does not require advance registration.
Contact Person: Naoki Nishiyama (nishiyama@ioc.u-tokyo.ac.jp)
This event is co-organized by the Institute for Advanced Studies on Asia, University of Tokyo (organized by the Regular Research Project W-1: Approaches to the “Persianate World” as a Tobunken Seminar), Kakenhi Grant-in-Aid “Sunnis” and “Shiʿis”: Historical Inquiries into Confessional Identities and Mutual Perceptions” (23K25371) and the Japan Office of the Association for the Study of Persianate Societies (as a Gilas Lecture).
6. Lecture – “Berlin – Toronto – Rome: Mughal Medallion Genealogies Revisited,” Franziska Kabelitz, Virtual Islamic Art History Seminar Series, September 23
Please join the Virtual Islamic Art History Seminar Series for our next talk on Tuesday, September 23, 2025, at 12:00 New York / 17:00 London / 18:00 Berlin / 19:00 Istanbul.
Franziska Kabelitz (Museum für Islamische Kunst) will present “Berlin – Toronto – Rome: Mughal Medallion Genealogies Revisited.”
To attend, please register in advance here:
https://wellesley.zoom.us/meeting/register/JgE8_c2xQTuA2tKtGsoYzQ
Upon registration, you’ll receive the link to access the lecture.
The full schedule of talks for the semester is available on our website at
https://viahss.org/. Although not every talk is recorded, recordings of several recent talks are available on the VIAHSS Vimeo page at https://vimeo.com/viahss/videos.
Contact Information
Drs. Rachel Winter, Jaimee Comstock-Skipp, and Alexander Brey
Contact Email
URL
7. HYBRID Keynote “Rebellions, Mandates, and Margins: Placing Druze Studies in the Historiography of the Modern Middle East” by Prof. Michael Provence, “2025 Druze Studies Conference”, University of Kansas, 16 October 2025, 19:15 – _20:45 CET
Information and registration: https://tinyurl.com/59zjzmhm
8. HYBRID International Conference “Islamic Feminism and Decolonial Futures: Epistemology, Ethics and Praxis”, Sarojini Naidu Centre for Women’s Studies, New Delhi, 1-2 November 2025
This conference invites contributions that critically engage with feminist hermeneutics, ethical reinterpretations of Islamic texts, the politics of knowledge production, legal reform, literary and lived practices of Muslim women across diverse contexts. Submissions are encouraged from scholars, researchers and practitioners who seek to explore the intersections of theory, faith, activism and justice within the framework of Islamic feminism.
Deadline for abstracts: 1 October 2025.
Information: https://networks.h-net.org/system/files/attachments/concept-notepdf.pdf
9. 59th Annual Meeting of MESA, Westin Washington, DC, 22-25 November 2025
There are over 300 sessions of panels, roundtables, workshops, and special sessions.
Deadline for registration at discount price: 24 October 2025.
Program preview: https://mesana.org/pdf/MESA2025_preview.pdf
10. HYBRID “Seventh Annual Islamic Philosophy Conference”, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA, 5-7 December 2025
We invite academic studies of scholars, methods, institutions, texts, and topics typically considered within the domain of philosophy, as well as those that treat kalam-theology, Islamic legal philosophy (usul al-fiqh), or other intellectual trends that at times may be seen as distinct from philosophy. Papers may be within specific disciplines (Philosophy, Islamic Theology, Religious Studies, etc.) or may be interdisciplinary.
Deadline for abstracts: 15 October 2025. Information: https://asipt.org/conferences/#current-conference
11. Conference “Public History in the Middle East”, Qatar National Library, 19-20 October 2026
This conference seeks to map the current state of public history in the Middle East and foster dialogue on its challen-ges, opportunities and intersections with broader social, political and cultural processes.
Deadline for abstracts: 31 January 2026. Information: https://tinyurl.com/27mr5xdr
12. Senior Lecturer in Arabic, Gothenburg University
A university lecturer in Arabic must also have demonstrated educational skills and hold a doctoral degree in Arabic. Knowledge and ability to teach in Swedish (or other Scandinavian language), English and Arabic are a requirement from the start of employment.
Deadline for applications: 22 September 2025. Information: https://tinyurl.com/4z2vdnnf
13. Associate or Full Professor in Islamic Studies, Hartford International University for Religion and Peace, Hartford, CT
A successful candidate should demonstrate expertise in a particular area of Islamic Studies, though the research specialization is open. The person must be grounded in the Islamic tradition and able to teach in broad areas related to contemporary issues and themes. The successful candidate will teach at the graduate master’s level and should have the intellectual depth required to direct doctoral level students.
Deadline for applications: 1 October 2025. Information: https://tinyurl.com/2xaedr9s
14. Faculty Member in Islamic Chaplaincy, Hartford International University for Religion and Peace, Hartford, CT
HIU seeks an engaged, dedicated practitioner-scholar to join our esteemed faculty. We invite applications for a full-time or half-time faculty position in Islamic Chaplaincy (open rank). The ideal candidate would be classically trained in the Islamic tradition, experienced as a chaplain, inter-culturally sensitive, and actively involved with local and broader Muslim chaplaincy communities.
Deadline for applications: 1 October 2025. Information: https://tinyurl.com/tuc4fhjt
15. Bourses de recherche en islamologie Master 2 (1 à 3 mois) et Doctorants/Jeunes docteurs (6 mois), IRMC & UMIFRE
L’octroi d’une bourse de mobilité devra permettre aux étudiant/es et chercheur/ses d’accomplir un travail de terrain de recherche en islamologie en étant accueilli/es dans une UMIFRE (ou instituts partenaires du programme).
Les dossiers de candidatures sont à envoyer avant le 30 septembre 2025. Information : https://tinyurl.com/53dk3k6v
16. Call for Articles on “Protracted Warfare in West Asia and North Africa: Global Questions for Marxist Approaches to War” for a Special Issue of the “Journal of Labor and Society”
We are interested in contributions that engage with this question of warfare in West Asia and North Africa through the lens of Marxist theoretical struggles and praxis.
Deadline for abstracts: 25 October 2025. Information: https://tinyurl.com/3sp2wznh
17. New Book “Songs of the Arabian Red Sea: A Cultural History” by Dionisius A. Agius, Muhammad Zafer Alhazmi, and Hasan Hujairi, I.B.Tauris-Bloomsbury, 264 pages
Using fieldwork conducted along the Hijaz and Upper Tihama coasts, the book documents examples of different musical forms and styles. Presenting the songs and their lyrics in the context of the geography, culture, oral history and musicology of the region, the book reveals the complex and connected network that influenced their development and the vital place of song and music for diverse communities of the region.
Information: https://tinyurl.com/yncyb6nr
WORKSHOP — CALL FOR PAPERS
The Social Dynamics of Communal Affiliation in Early Islam
Universiteit Leiden, Netherlands
11–12 June 2026
RATIONALE
In much existing scholarship, our understanding of Muslim groups in early Islam has been gauged through a reliance on later works of heresiography and doxography. These fourth/tenth century works portray a diverse range of groups (including the Imami, Zaydi, and Ismaili Shiʿa, Kharijis, Muʿtazilis, Murjiʾis, and various others who eventually came under the banner of ‘Sunnism’) emerging in the first three centuries of Islam, often over issues surrounding the rightful political leadership of the Muslim community and later coalescing around other theological beliefs which facilitated more coherent, structured systems for members of these groups to adhere to. Studies engaging with such works have greatly enriched our understanding of the doctrines and beliefs ascribed to these groups, their evolution over time, and what images the sources construct of them.
In studies on the social dynamics of this period, however, more attention has been paid to relations between Muslim and non-Muslim groups through processes such as conversion and cross-communal engagement with alternative legal systems than has been between the various Muslim groups. There is arguably a lacuna in thinking about how individuals belonging to divergent Muslim groups interacted, and how the interactions between them were practically structured. Research on interactions between Muslims belonging to divergent groups has tended to focus on theological polemics or political violence, rather than day-to-day interactions. We therefore lack a deeper understanding of what it meant to belong to a Muslim group during this early period of the first/seventh to third/ninth centuries on a more practical level. With the aim of addressing this, in this workshop, organised under the auspices of the ERC Horizon Starting Grant project ‘Embodied Imamate: Mapping the Development of the Early Shiʿi Community 700-900 CE’, we encourage participants to think about interactions between Muslim groups, and the institutions and mechanisms which facilitated these interactions during the first three centuries of Islam. To this end, three key concerns are identified as central to this workshop:
The Fluidity/Ambiguity of Communal Affiliation
The question of how fixed the boundaries between the various groups were during this period should not necessarily be taken for granted. This is not to say that such boundaries did not exist, but rather that they may not accurately reflect the historical realities of what these boundaries implied as a result of the tendency to back-project later heresiographical categories onto these groups. We are interested in exploring new ways of thinking about these groups beyond the constraints of heresiographical categories. The use of categories such as ‘Khariji’ or ‘ahl al-sunna wa-l-jamāʿa’, for example, have been problematised in recent scholarship and should act as an impetus for reconsidering our terminology and the categories we apply to figures of this period. Some potential themes for participants to consider include:
Means of Demarcating and Enforcing Communal Boundaries
What mechanisms were utilised to demarcate and enforce communal boundaries? Building upon recent important work on ritual actions such as prayer, for example, as a means of communal boundary-making, we encourage participants to think about other cases — legal and otherwise — which demonstrate the ways in which Muslim groups established themselves apart from each other. Some potential themes for participants to consider include:
Cases of Interactions across Communal Boundaries
What the adherents of such groups believed aside, how did one’s communal affiliation impact relations with those of other persuasions and what implications did adherence to one of these groups have on how one negotiated daily life in a communally diverse society? Most cases we have access to in this regard are inevitably centred around elite individuals, research on which nevertheless still requires further attention; for example, scholarly debate and exchange, court politics, attempts at state control of religious authorities etc. Innovative readings of the sources with this concern in mind can also, however, provide us with some insight into the lived experiences of non-elite individuals with regards to interactions across communal boundaries. Some potential themes for participants to consider include:
ABSTRACT SUBMISSION
Please submit an abstract of no more than 400 words along with a brief biography of no more than 100 words as a single PDF document to Adam Ramadhan (contact details below). Submissions from established as well as junior scholars, including PhD students and independent researchers, are welcomed. The deadline for abstract submission is 14 November 2025. You are encouraged to outline in your abstract the sources you will use in your paper and the scholarly interventions you intend to make. Accepted participants will be notified by 5 December 2025.
WORKSHOP FORMAT
The workshop will be held in-person at Universiteit Leiden between 11–12 June 2026; there will be no scope for online participation. Participants will have 20 minutes to present their paper followed by 30 minutes of discussion for each paper. The language of the workshop is English.
PUBLICATION OF WORKSHOP PROCEEDINGS
The aim of this workshop is to produce a special issue in a peer reviewed journal, and participants’ contributions will therefore be considered for publication. Participants are asked to indicate their interest in contributing to this publication when submitting their abstract.
LOGISTICS
Reasonable travel and accommodation costs will be covered for participants. Those with access to institutional support to cover these costs are asked to inform the organisers when submitting their abstract so as to be able to direct more support towards junior scholars.
CONTACT DETAILS
The main point of contact for this workshop is Adam Ramadhan who can be reached at a.a.a.h.ramadhan@hum.leidenuniv.nl.
ORGANISATION
This workshop is organised by Adam Ramadhan and Edmund Hayes under the auspices of the ERC Horizon Starting Grant project ‘Embodied Imamate: Mapping the Development of the Early Shiʿi Community 700-900 CE’ (grant no. 101077946) based at Universiteit Leiden.
1.Online Resource – Explore the Collection of the Museum for Islamic Art – Pergamon Museum, Berlin
The Museum for Islamic Art is pleased to announce that the online database of the State Museums of Berlin, with the option to filter and explore objects specifically from our collection, is directly accessible through the Online Portal Islamic·Art.
Here you can explore detailed information on more than 12,500 objects from the collection – a resource that is continuously expanded and updated by our team.
In addition, the Online Portal Islamic·Art offers numerous stories, insights, and background information about the museum’s objects.
Start exploring here: https://islamic-art.smb.museum/?lang=en [Tip: scroll to the end of the website to find the Research module]
Please Note: Access to the online database through Sammlungen Online website is no longer possible.
Contact Information
Museum für Islamische Kunst (im Pergamonmuseum)
Staatliche Museen zu Berlin – Preußischer Kulturbesitz
Geschwister-Scholl-Straße 6
D-10117 Berlin
Contact Email
URL
https://islamic-art.smb.museum/?lang=en
2. Avicenna Study Group: Fifth Meeting 2025 (Bochum)
Fifth International Meeting of the Avicenna Study Group (ASG V), to be held 2–4 December 2025 at the new Avicenna Study Center (ASC), hosted by the Institute of Arabic and Islamic Studies at Ruhr University Bochum (RUB:AI) in Germany. This event is organised within the framework of the ERC project “Avicenna Live: The Immediate Context of Avicenna’s Intellectual Formation” (ALIVE).
The central theme of ASG V will be Avicenna’s al-Mubāḥaṯāt, a text whose significance for understanding Avicenna’s intellectual development and his interactions with his own disciples cannot be overstated. Through fifteen presentations, leading scholars will explore the critical value of al-Mubāḥaṯāt for our knowledge of Avicenna’s philosophy, aiming to illuminate new perspectives on the evolution of his thought and the dynamics of his scholarly exchanges.
The necessity of this endeavour is underscored by the diversity of scholarly opinion: while some colleagues regard al-Mubāḥaṯāt as merely reiterative of Avicenna’s main works, others consider its discussions a unique and indispensable source. This striking divergence highlights the urgent need for a comprehensive and nuanced examination of the text.
We are delighted to announce that the following distinguished scholars will present their latest research at our conference: Asad Q. Ahmed, Amilcar Aldama, Hamed Arezaei, M. Fariduddin Attar, Kübra Bahçi, Catarina Belo, Zhenyu Cai, Zachary Candy, Osama Eshera, Jari Kaukua, Haruo Kobayashi, István Lánczky, Ruizhi Ma, Stephen Ogden, and Meryem Sebti.
A special highlight of ASG V will be the launch of a new website dedicated to facilitating the study and collaborative translation of al-Mubāḥaṯāt. This platform will enable the global community of Avicenna scholars to engage with the text and contribute to its translation into English.
Contact: Kübra Bahçi, Andreas Lammer
(kuebra.bahci@rub.de , andreas.lammer@rub.de )
3. Nanyang Technological University, Singapore – Assistant, Associate, or Full Professor in Art History
