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DTSTART;TZID=Asia/Qatar:20260630T080000
DTEND;TZID=Asia/Qatar:20260630T170000
DTSTAMP:20260702T223355
CREATED:20260122T090233Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260623T071115Z
UID:10001595-1782806400-1782838800@cirs.qatar.georgetown.edu
SUMMARY:Africana Studies Across Regions: In Conversation with Dr. Su’ad Abdul Khabeer and Professor Akintunde Akinade
DESCRIPTION:In Conversation with Dr. Su’ad Abdul Khabeer and Professor Akintunde Akinade \n\nWhat does Africana Studies look like depending on where it is practiced? This lunch talk brings scholars into conversation on how institutional location\, disciplinary training\, and regional context shape the questions\, methods\, and stakes of Africana Studies. The discussion considers the relationship between scholarship and community\, and how recognition\, accountability\, and relevance vary across contexts. \n\nOn January 22nd\, the Center for International and Regional Studies (CIRS) hosted Dr. Su’ad Abdul Khabeer\, a scholar of anthropology and Africana Studies at the University of Michigan\, in conversation with Professor Akintunde Akinade\, Professor of Theology at Georgetown University in Qatar. The dialogue explored the intersections of theology\, Africana Studies\, pedagogy\, and resistance within increasingly hostile academic environments. The conversation began with both scholars reflecting on their experiences teaching liberation theology and Africana Studies\, with Professor Akinade sharing that after nearly 30 years of teaching\, he remains passionate about doing “theology for the people” and moving students beyond Eurocentric frameworks to engage with theologies from Latin America\, Africa\, and Asia. He described teaching a course on liberation theologies at GU-Q and noted that students are responsive and engaged\, coming to class ready to move beyond dogma and think critically. \n\nThe discussion outlined the challenges of teaching in the current political climate\, particularly around issues of white supremacy and institutional resistance. Professor Akinade shared a powerful teaching moment from his recent class where he defined white supremacy as sin\, explaining that from a theological perspective\, sin is separation—separation between humanity and divinity\, but in the context of white supremacy\, it manifests as separation between people through hierarchies that deny our shared humanity. Dr. Abdul Khabeer added Islamic theological perspectives on this\, citing scholars like Sherman Jackson who frames white supremacy as shirk\, the association of partners with God that destabilizes the fundamental Islamic principle of tawhid\, the oneness of God. She also mentioned feminist Islamic theologian Amina Wadud who makes similar arguments about patriarchy usurping divine authority. Both scholars emphasized that these theological framings ground their resistance to oppression in core spiritual principles. \n\nThe conversation addressed how space and place shape what can be taught and said. Professor Akinade contrasted his experience teaching in Doha\, where he feels freedom to speak openly\, with his previous position in High Point\, North Carolina\, where students were more resistant to revolutionary content. Dr. Abdul Khabeer spoke candidly about the contemporary reality of teaching in the United States\, including students recording classes to try to “catch” professors saying something controversial\, the need to have attorneys on standby\, meticulous documentation of all interactions\, and the recent elimination of diversity\, equity\, and inclusion programming at the University of Michigan where she teaches. Despite these hostile conditions\, both scholars emphasized the absolute necessity of continuing the work.  \n\nA significant portion of the discussion focused on teaching the humanity of Black people and moving beyond caricatures and stereotypes. Professor Akinade grounded this in the theological concept that everyone is created in the image of God\, making every person precious and important with a divine spark. Dr. Abdul Khabeer described teaching a hip-hop course where she uses albums like Biggie Smalls’ “Ready to Die” to help students understand Black humanity in three dimensions rather than one-dimensional caricatures. She explained that by analyzing songs like “Suicidal Thoughts” and Geto Boys’ “Mind Playing Tricks on Me\,” students learn to understand the socioeconomic contexts shaping people’s lives\, recognize the community and relationships that exist\, and see the solidarity and care present even in difficult circumstances. The goal is to move students beyond seeing Black people as hypersexual and hyperviolent stereotypes to understanding the fuller context of lived experiences\, mental health struggles\, and community support systems. \n\nBoth scholars emphasized the importance of embodiment and experience as forms of knowledge\, challenging the Enlightenment paradigm’s overemphasis on reason alone. Dr. Abdul Khabeer\, who is also a dancer trained in Katherine Dunham’s dance anthropology technique\, explained how everyday life\, how one dresses\, moves through space\, and physically exists\, is deeply tied to history and politics. She shared an example of applying to Vassar College and discovering that the staircases were built for “women’s gaits” but her feet were too large for them\, teaching her viscerally about who institutions are designed for and who they exclude. Professor Akinade connected this to his theological work\, arguing that experience—particularly the experience of those raised in villages\, those who have suffered\, those marginalized—must be used to redefine orthodoxy and challenge monolithic paradigms. He referenced James Cone’s declaration that “God is Black” not as a statement about skin color but as an ontological connection with suffering\, as Cornel West says\, letting suffering speak. \n\nThe conversation highlighted the expansiveness that Africana Studies offers as an epistemology. Dr. Abdul Khabeer explained that unlike the traditional Euro-American tradition that says “you do it this way or that way and that’s it\,” Africana Studies provides more options\, more possibilities\, and therefore more solutions. She attributed this expansiveness to the fact that Black people\, particularly descendants of enslaved people\, are “miracles walking” because they were not meant to survive but did survive through imagination and refusing to accept oppressive narratives as truth. This survival through creativity and alternative ways of knowing gives Africana Studies its power to envision futures and discover opportunities that dominant frameworks foreclose. \n\nProfessor Akinade challenged who gets to define rigorous scholarship\, questioning why work not done at elite Western institutions like Rome\, Columbia\, or Yale is deemed less rigorous. He invoked Steve Biko’s book title “I Write What I Like” to assert his own approach: “I write what I like\, I teach what I like\, and I’m accountable\, accountable to my people.” Both scholars emphasized that scholarship cannot be abstract but must be connected to life\, must be life-giving\, must help things grow. They discussed the danger of “dead scholarship” that exists only in ivory towers disconnected from the communities it purports to study\, though Dr. Abdul Khabeer nuanced this by noting that death itself is a portal to other things in many traditions\, so perhaps the better term is scholarship that is not life-giving\, that doesn’t allow things to grow and flourish. \n\nArticle by Maryam Daud\, Administrative Assistant at CIRS and Honore Mugiraneza\, CIRS Publications Assistant
URL:https://cirs.qatar.georgetown.edu/event/africana-studies-across-regions-in-conversation-with-dr-suad-abdul-khabeer-and-professor-akintunde-akinade/
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DTSTART;TZID=Asia/Qatar:20260701T080000
DTEND;TZID=Asia/Qatar:20260701T170000
DTSTAMP:20260702T223355
CREATED:20251028T131444Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260623T070927Z
UID:10001588-1782892800-1782925200@cirs.qatar.georgetown.edu
SUMMARY:CIRS Lunch Talk: Masterclass with Professor Arjun Appadurai on "Global Cultural Flows"
DESCRIPTION:In the 1990’s\, the world began to see a massive growth in transnational traffic in images\, ideologies and commodities\, a process which popularized the term globalization. Today\, almost four decades later\, the world order is multipolar\, highly unstable and full of obstacles to free cultural flows. How can we interpret these changes? \n\nHosted by CIRS\, in collaboration with the Indian Ocean Studies Working Group\, this masterclass brings together scholars and students for an engaging discussion on the dynamics of globalization and cultural movement. Renowned anthropologist Arjun Appadurai will reflect on how people\, objects\, and ideas circulate across borders\, and how imagination\, media\, and markets shape these flows. Drawing on his influential works Modernity at Large\, The Social Life of Things\, Fear of Small Numbers\, and Banking on Words Professor Appadurai will offer a framework for understanding disjuncture\, modernity and power in the present moment.
URL:https://cirs.qatar.georgetown.edu/event/cirs-lunch-talk-masterclass-with-professor-arjun-appadurai-on-global-cultural-flows/
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DTSTART;TZID=Asia/Qatar:20260702T080000
DTEND;TZID=Asia/Qatar:20260702T170000
DTSTAMP:20260702T223355
CREATED:20251103T123243Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260623T070743Z
UID:10001590-1782979200-1783011600@cirs.qatar.georgetown.edu
SUMMARY:Laboring to Keep the Dead Alive: Commemoration and Social Reproduction in the Kurdish Movement
DESCRIPTION:Speaker: Marlene Schäfers\, Associate Professor\, Department of Cultural Anthropology\, Utrecht University \n\nOn November 13\, CIRS hosted a lunch talk in collaboration with the Critical Security Studies Hub at the Institute for Advanced Study in the Global South at Northwestern University\, titled “Labouring to Keep the Dead Alive: Commemoration and Social Reproduction in the Kurdish Movement.” \n\nIn this talk\, Dr Marlene Schäfers explored how the Kurdish movement understands and mobilizes martyrdom as a form of labour that sustains the community. Drawing on examples of funerals\, memorial ceremonies\, social media tributes\, and the production of “martyr albums\,” she showed that these practices constitute a vital mode of reproductive labour\, one that preserves continuity and identity when biological kinship cannot be relied upon.  \n\nWhat emerged clearly is that these acts of remembrance are not peripheral or decorative. They are central to how the movement reproduces itself. In contexts where traditional forms of kinship or biological reproduction cannot be relied upon\, especially in guerrilla camps marked by precarity and constant threat\, memory becomes a primary means of sustaining life. The speaker drew attention to the idea that narration itself becomes a reproductive act. Each story\, each obituary\, each ceremony extends the presence of the dead into the lives of the living. Through this narrative labour\, the community cultivates what one might call descendants or extended selves\, people whose identities form through their attachment to martyrs and to the struggle they represent. \n\nA striking quote from the presentation captured this ethos: “We have learned that there are other ways of multiplying.” In other words\, the reproduction of the community does not depend on producing biological offspring. Instead\, it comes from producing affective ties\, political commitment\, and a shared sense of continuity. As one Kurdish interlocutor explained\, “If you go to Kurdistan\, to Rojava\, and ask who Martyr Zîlan is\, everyone will tell you. In this way martyrdom becomes a means of reproducing the existence of the people\, and of the person herself.” Martyrs do not disappear; their memory generates new forms of political life. \n\nThe presentation also highlighted how internationalist volunteers in Rojava engage with this culture of martyrdom. For many of them\, the emotional and ethical demands of this form of commemoration require a departure from liberal Western assumptions that individual life is the highest good. Instead\, they are encouraged to adopt a long-term\, historical view: to understand their lives as part of a continuum that includes those who fought before them and those who will continue the struggle after. This shift in orientation is both necessary and unsettling. It asks individuals to situate their grief within a broader collective horizon. \n\nThis does not mean that death becomes easy. On the contrary\, participants repeatedly acknowledged that death remains bitter. One writer described rebelling against each new announcement of martyrdom\, asking\, “Why is there death? Are we condemned to lose our beautiful friends forever?” Even language seems insufficient. “No single word does justice to them\,” another wrote. The task of writing about the dead becomes a dilemma: if one writes\, the attempt feels inadequate; if one does not write\, the memory risks disappearing. This tension is precisely what pushes many to take up the pen again\, despite what they describe as their own lack of skill. Writing becomes a moral responsibility. \n\nUltimately\, the speaker argued that martyrdom in the Kurdish movement is not only a political symbol. It is a mechanism of social reproduction\, a way of keeping the community alive under conditions of war\, displacement\, and uncertainty. \n\nArticle by Maryam Daud\, Administrative Assistant at CIRS \n\n\n\n\nMarlene Schäfers is associate professor at the Department of Cultural Anthropology at Utrecht University in the Netherlands. Her research focuses on the impact of state violence on intimate and gendered lives\, voice and memory\, and the politics of death and the afterlife. She specializes in the anthropology of the Kurdish regions and modern Turkey. Her first monograph\, Voices that Matter: Kurdish Women at the Limits of Representation in Contemporary Turkey\, was published with the University of Chicago Press in 2023 and awarded the annual Book Prize of the Ottoman and Turkish Studies Association in 2024. 
URL:https://cirs.qatar.georgetown.edu/event/laboring-to-keep-the-dead-alivecommemoration-and-social-reproduction-in-the-kurdish-movement/
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