Rethinking Nationalism, Sectarianism and Ethno-Religious Mobilisation in the Middle East
9.30-9.45: Coffee and pastries
9.45-11.15:
Panel 4: Building Commonality and Difference Through Time
Chair: Philip Robins
Henry Clements: A Very Christian Crisis in the Late Ottoman Empire
Elvire Corboz: Shi‘i Discourses on Islamic Unity: Reconfiguring Majority-Minority
Relations Within Islam
Vefa Erginbas: Bridging the Sunni-Shi‘ite Divide: A Historical Look at the
Appropriation of the Twelve Imams in the Ottoman Empire
Hussein Abou Saleh: The Dynamics of Sectarianism Between the Shi‘ite and the
‘Alawite community of Syria
11.30-13.00: Panel 5: Variations of Sectarianisation and Sectarian Mobilisations
Chair: Eugene Rogan
Toby Dodge: The Theory and Practice of Sectarian Mobilisation in Iraq
Fred Lawson: Why Did the Syrian Uprising Become Sectarian?
Ceren Lord: Sectarianised Securitisation and Alevi Mobilisation in Turkey in the Post-
2011 Era
Keiko Sakai: Competing for Victimhood and Nationhood: Sectarianism in Post-War
Iraq as a Legitimisation of the Right to Rebel
13.00-14.00: Lunch (provided for speakers)
14.00-15.30: Panel 6: Religious Actors in Negotiating the Nation
Chair: Ceren Lord
Z. Asli Elitsoy: Civil Friday Prayers: A Kurdish Challenge to the Religious Political
Power in Turkey
Yoko Uno: ‘Religion is a Wall’ for What? Riza Nur’s Thought on Turkish Nationalism
and Religious Authority in the Early Republican Period
David Warren: Cleansing the Nation of the ‘Dogs of Hell’: Nationalist Legal
Reasoning Among the Azhari ‘Ulama in Support of the 2013 Egyptian Coup
and its Bloody Aftermath
Noor Zehra Zaid: From Shi‘as to Iraqis, and Pakistanis to Shi‘as: Nationalism,
Transnationalism and Sectarianism in Modern Iraq
15.45-17.15: Panel 7: Religious Actors in Sectarian Politics
Chair: Justin Jones
Amaan Merali: Persecution and Partnership: The Ottomans and the Aga Khan Before
the Great War
Alex Henley: Sectarianisation as the Construction of ‘Religion’: The Case of
‘Religious Leaders’ in Lebanon
Hratch Tchilingirian: Secularising Effects of Sectarianism: The Case of the Armenian
Church in the Middle East During the Cold War Era
Anthony O’Mahony: Eastern Christian Perspectives on Religion and Politics in
Modern Syria: The Orthodox Patriarchate of Antioch after 2000
Date:
27 January 2018, 9:00 (Saturday, 2nd week, Hilary 2018)
Venue:
Pembroke College, St Aldates OX1 1DW
Venue Details:
Harold Lee Room
Speaker: Various Speakers
Organising department:
Faculty of Theology and Religion
Booking required?:
Not required
Audience:
Members of the University only
Editor:
Andreia Gomes Da Costa Leite