Rethinking Nationalism, Sectarianism and Ethno-Religious Mobilisation in the Middle East
9.30-9.45: Coffee and pastries
9.45-11.15:
Panel 8: Placing Religion in Protest and Social Movements
Chair: Alex Henley
Teije Hidde Donker: Jihadism and Governance in Northern Syria
Fiona McCallum: The Changing Nature of Coptic Protest in Egypt
Yasuyuki Matsunaga: A Processual Sociological Perspective on Sectarian Insurgency in Iran’s Two Border Areas
11.30-13.00:
Panel 9: Everyday Sectarianism in the Reimagination of Boundaries
Chair: Walter Armbrust
Şule Can: Vahed! Nihna u Suriyah Vahed!: Shifting Ethno-Religious Boundaries and Politicization at the Turkish-Syrian Border
Maria Kastrinou: From a Window in Jaramana: Sectarianism, Religion and the Impact of War on a Druze Neighbourhood in Syria
Fouad Marei: Theatres of Resistance: Shi‘i Ritual Practice as Politics and Performance
Gaétan du Roy: Everyday Religious Boundaries: Reassessing Religious Revivals from Shubra, Cairo
13.00-14.00: Lunch (provided for speakers)
14.00-15.30:
Panel 10: Reconciling State and Sub-State Identities in Contested National Spaces
Chair: Ahmed al-Shahi
Marina Calculli: Hezbollah’s Phoenicianism: From Threat to the Guardian of the ‘Lebanese Nation’
Hiroko Miyokawa: Coptic Historiography in Colonial Egypt: From the History of Patriarchs to the History of Coptic Nation
Dylan O’Driscoll: Iraq, Subnationalism and Militias
Michael Willis: Enemies, Allies or Competitors? Islamist-Amazigh Movement Relations in Morocco and Algeria
15.30-16.00: Coffee
Date:
28 January 2018, 9:00 (Sunday, 3rd 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