Asia-Africa

Sivan  Balslev

Dr. Sivan Balslev

Asia-Africa Institute
Department of Islam and Middle Eastern Studies

Research Fields

  • Iranian history

  • History of Children and Childhood

  • Masculinity studies

  • Gender and sexuality

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About

Dr. Balslev is a historian of modern Iran, focusing on cultural and social history of the 19th and 20th centuries. Her fields of interest include gender, sexuality, childhood studies, and everyday life. Her current project focuses on the history of children and childhood in Iran, circa 1870-1970. This project is being funded by the Israel Science Foundation (grant no. 743/21).

Since 2018, Dr. Balslev has been a facultymember of the Department of Islamic and Middle Eastern Studies, where she teaches courses on modern Iran, its history, politicsand culture, as well as on social and cultural history of the modern Middle East.

 

Selected Publications

Review Article: Claus V. Pedersen. “Rise of the Persian Novel: From the Constitutional Revolution to Reza Shah 1910-1927. Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz Verlag, 2016.” In Jerusalem Studies in Arabic and Islam, 50, 2021, pp. 473-480.

 "Population Crisis, Marriage Reform and the Regulation of Male Sexuality in Interwar Iran", British Journal of Middle Eastern Studies, August 2016

 "Dressed for Success: Hegemonic Masculinity, Elite Men, and Westernisation in Iran, c. 1900-1940" - Gender & History 26 (3), November 2014, pp. 545-564

"Shifting Sexual Norms in Nineteenth Century Iran" in The Global Encyclopedia of Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender, and Queer History (Farmington Hills, Michigan: Scribner Macmillan, 2019), pp.1491-1494.

 

Selected Awards

2021-25 ISF individual grant – “A History of Children and Childhood in Modern Iran (circa 1870-1970),” grant no. 743/21, 4 year grant, 120,000 NIS per year. 

 

Teaching

2020: "History of Children and Childhood in the Middle East" – MA

2018: "Visual Culture in Modern Iran", Graduate Tutorial Reading.

2018-2020: "The Objects That Changed the Middle East", Undergraduate elective course.

2018-2020: "Culture and Resistance in Modern Iran" Undergraduate elective course.

2017-20: "Modern Iran" Undergraduate seminar.

2016, 2018, 2020: "Masculinity, Society and Politics in Modern Iran" – Undergraduate elective course.

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Michal Biran

Prof. Michal Biran

Asia-Africa Institute
Department of Asian Studies
Islamic and Middle Eastern Studies

Research Fields

  • History of Inner Asia;
  • History of Imperial China;
  • History of the Pre-Modern Muslim world;
  • The Mongol Empire; Central Asia;
  • Cross-Cultural Contacts between China and the Muslim World;
  • Ilkhanid Baghdad;
  • Mobility;
  • Migrations;
  • Nomadic culture;
  • Conversion;
  • Transmission of knowledge;
  • Historiography;
  • Collective Memory

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About

Michal Biran is the Max and Sophie Mydans Foundation Professor in the Humanities at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, a member of the Israel Academy of Science and Humanities. Since October 2021, she has served as head of the Institute of Asian and African Study at HUJI.  She is a historian of Inner Asia, imperial China and the medieval Islamic world. She teaches in the departments of Asian Studies and Islamic and Middle Eastern Studies at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. Prof. Biran has published extensively on the Mongol Empire, Mongol and pre-Mongol Central Asia (especially the Qara Khitai and the Chaghadaids), cross-cultural contacts between China, nomadic empires and the Muslim world, comparative study of empires, nomadic culture, migrations and mobility, and Ilkhanid Baghdad. 

Prof. Biran has authored or edited 12 books and volumes and authored dozens of articles. She has recently completed editing The Cambridge History of the Mongol Empire along with Hodong Kim (2 vols. forthcoming 2022).

 

Selected Publications

1. Michal Biran. Qaidu and the Rise of the Independent Mongol State in Central Asia. Richmond, Surrey: Curzon Presss, 1997. (Kindle edition 2013; Reprint: London: Routledge 2016).

2. Michal Biran. The Qara Khitai Empire in Eurasian History: Between China and the Islamic World. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 2005, 2008.

3. Michal Biran. Chinggis Khan. (“The Makers of the Muslim World”). Oxford: OneWorld Publications, 2007 (Kindle edition 2012; Mongolian translation 2015; Turkish translation 2019).

4. Michal Biran, ed. Mobility and Transformation: Cultural Exchange in Mongol Eurasia Journal of the Economic and Social History of the Orient  62: 2-3 (2019).

5. Michal Biran, Jonathan Brack and Francesca Fiaschetti, eds. Along the Silk Roads in Mongol Eurasia: Generals, Merchants, Intellectuals. Berkeley: University of California Press, 2020. (Korean translation 2021).

 

Selected Awards

      2021-           Corresponding Member, The Austrian Academy of Sciences

2009, 2013, 2015     Excellent Teaching Award, HUJI

2014-          Fellow, The Israel Academy for Sciences and Humanities

2014           The Klachky Prize for the Advancement of the Frontiers of Science, HUJI 

2012-2017 The Anneliese Maier Research Award, Alexander von Humboldt Foundation (Asian Studies)

2007           The Landau Prize for Research and Sciences (History of East Asia and Its Cultures)

2006-9 -      The Michael Bruno Prize, The Rothschild Foundation (Middle Eastern Studies) {frozen 2007-2011 for personal reasons}

2004-5         The Yoram Ben-Porat Presidential Prize for Excelling Young Researcher, HUJI.

 

Teaching

Courses taught in the last 5 years (B.A., M.A.)

BA Courses (last 5 years):

Introduction to the History and Culture of Late Imperial China (906-1911) (Lesson, EAS).

The Silk Roads: Asia and the Muslim World in the Pre-Modern Era (Seminar, ME)

Between China and the Mideast: Issues in Central Asian History (Seminar, ME and  EAS).

The Mongols in the Islamic World (Seminar, ME).

Cross-Cultural Encounters in the Pre-Modern Muslim World (BA seminar, ME)

Honors Program in Chinese Studies (with Yuri Pines and Orna Naftali/ Gideon Shelach and Yuri Pines) (EAS)

MA Courses (last 5 years):

Mobility and Transformation in Mongol Eurasia (ERC seminar 2015, 2017).

Silk Roads Encounters in North West China (Touring course in NW China, with Yuri Pines and Gideon Shelach, summer 2017, EAS)

 Eurasian Nomads in World History (ME, with Michael Shenkar 2019-20)

Issues in Ilkhanid History: The Mongols in Greater Iran (ME, 2021).

 

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Hillel Cohen

Prof. Hillel Cohen

Department of Islam and Middle East Studies
Asia-Africa Institute

Research Fields

  • Zionist ideology and practice
  • Palestinian society and politics
  • Palestinian collaborators and Israel's intelligence agencies
  • Mizrahi Jews
  • Palestinian refugees
  • Jerusalem
  • holy places
  • al-Aqsa
  • Religion and the Israeli-Palestinian conflict
  • Islam and Judaism - Jews and Muslims
  • Palestine under the British mandate
  • Land issues

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About

Prof. Hillel Cohen was born in 1961 in Jerusalem. Cohen studies the dynamics between the Zionist movement (and later the state of Israel) and the Palestinian Arabs, as well as the history of Jewish-Muslims relations prior to Zionism, and the history of Mizrahi (aka Oriental) Jews before and after 1948.

 

Selected Publications

Army of Shadows: Palestinian Collaborators in the Service of Zionism 1917-1948 (Berkeley: University of California Press, 2008).

Good Arabs: The Israeli Intelligence and the Israeli Arabs (Berkeley: University of California Press, 2010).

The Rise and Fall of Arab Jerusalem: Politics and the City 1967-2007 (London: Routledge, 2011).

Year Zero of the Arab-Israeli Conflict: 1929 (Brandeis University Press, 2015).

 

Selected Awards

Ben Zvi Prize for the best book on Israel history for Year Zero of the Israeli-Arab Conflict: 1929.

Azrieli Institute Prize for Best Book in Israel Studies, Concordia University; for Year Zero of the Israeli-Arab Conflict: 1929

 

Teaching

Bachelor's degree courses

The Palestinians: Political and Social History (B.A. seminar)

Zionism and the Arabs

Jerusalem - al-Quds

Jewish-Muslim relations from Muhammad to present: selected topics

 

Master's degree courses

1948: The real story (MA seminar)

Sephardi and Oriental Jews: History and Identity (MA seminar)
 

 

Research Fields

Zionist ideology and practice

Palestinian society and politics

Palestinian collaborators and Israel's intelligence agencies

Mizrahi Jews

Palestinian refugees

Jerusalem

holy places

al-Aqsa

Religion and the Israeli-Palestinian conflict

Islam and Judaism - Jews and Muslims

Palestine under the British mandate

Land issues

 

About

Prof. Hillel Cohen was born in 1961 in Jerusalem. Cohen studies the dynamics between the Zionist movement (and later the state of Israel) and the Palestinian Arabs, as well as the history of Jewish-Muslims relations prior to Zionism, and the history of Mizrahi (aka Oriental) Jews before and after 1948.

 

Selected Publications

Army of Shadows: Palestinian Collaborators in the Service of Zionism 1917-1948 (Berkeley: University of California Press, 2008).

Good Arabs: The Israeli Intelligence and the Israeli Arabs (Berkeley: University of California Press, 2010).

The Rise and Fall of Arab Jerusalem: Politics and the City 1967-2007 (London: Routledge, 2011).

Year Zero of the Arab-Israeli Conflict: 1929 (Brandeis University Press, 2015).

 

Selected Awards

Ben Zvi Prize for the best book on Israel history for Year Zero of the Israeli-Arab Conflict: 1929.

Azrieli Institute Prize for Best Book in Israel Studies, Concordia University; for Year Zero of the Israeli-Arab Conflict: 1929

 

Teaching

Bachelor's degree courses

The Palestinians: Political and Social History (B.A. seminar)

Zionism and the Arabs

Jerusalem - al-Quds

Jewish-Muslim relations from Muhammad to present: selected topics

 

Master's degree courses

1948: The real story (MA seminar)

Sephardi and Oriental Jews: History and Identity (MA seminar)

 

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Meir Hatina

Prof. Meir Hatina

Asia-Africa Institute
Department of Islam and Middle Eastern Studies

Research Fields

  • History of ideas and politics in the Middle East in the 19th and 20th centuries from a comparative perspective, especially in relation to Western and Jewish thought and with an emphasis on Islamic politics.

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About

Lecturer, Department of Islamic and Middle Eastern Studies, Institute for Asian and African Studies

 

Selected Publications

Islam and Salvation in Palestine (Tel Aviv: The Moshe Dayan Center, 2001), 180 pp.

Identity Politics in the Middle East: Liberal Thought and Islamic Challenge in Egypt (London: I.B. Tauris, March 2007), 270 pp.

Ulama, Politics and the Public Sphere: An Egyptian Perspective (Salt Lake City: The University of Utah Press, 2010), 244 pp.

Martyrdom in Modern Islam: Piety, Power and Politics (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2014), 276 pp.

Arab Liberal Thought in the Modern Age (Manchester: Manchester University Press, 2020), 272 pp.

 

Selected Awards

The Golda Meir Fellowship Fund, 2006

Competitive grants: ISF (2003-2005, 2007-2010, 2013-2016, 2019-2022)

 

Teaching

Bachelor's degree courses

Egypt in the Modern Era

Religion and State in the Middle East

Protest and Revolution in Modern Islam: A Comparative Perspective

Religious Culture Contested: Sufism in Modern Times

Ulama, Sufis and the Challenges of Modernity

On Sacrifice and Death in Modern Islam: A Comparative Perspective

Arab Liberalism: Intellectual and Political History

Speaking Truth to Power: Intellectuals and Revolution in the Middle East

Between the Madrasa and the Market: Religious Knowledge and Chrisma in Modern Islam

Introduction to the Modern Middle East

The Muslim Brotherhood: A Modern Mass Movement

Modern Arabic Thought: Selected themes

Palestinian Islam

Global Jihad in Historical Perspective: Thought, Politics and Violence

Islamic Protestanism: An Unfinished Project?

Revolution and Society: Marginal People in Egyptian Cinema, 1952-1970

 

Master's degree courses

Continuity and Change in Sufi Culture: Selected Issues (together with Prof. Sara Sviri, Department of Arabic Language and Literature)

Theology and Power in the Middle East: Method and History

Liberal Thought in Egypt

Critical Arab Thought: Selected Essays

Methodological Approaches in the Study of Islam and the Middle East

Martyrdom in Medieval Islamic Thought

Zionism and Israel in the Arab Liberal Thought

Nineteenth-Century Salafiyya and Enlightenment

Autobiographies as a Historical Source in the Study of Modern Arab Culture

Historical Myths and Modern Politics

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Abigail Jacobson

Dr. Abigail Jacobson

Asia-Africa Institute
Department of Islam and Middle Eastern Studies

Research Fields

  • World War I
  • Palestine studies
  • Israel Studies
  • Israeli Palestinian conflict
  • Urban history
  • Mediterranean studies
  • Late Ottoman history

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About

Dr. Abigail Jacobson is a historian who focuses on the social and urban history of late Ottoman and Mandatory Palestine and the Eastern Mediterranean. Her main research interest is the history of ethnically and nationally mixed spaces and communities, especially during times of war and conflict. She is also researching the history of Oriental Jews in Palestine and Israel.

 

Selected Publications

From Empire to Empire: Jerusalem between Ottoman and British Rule (Syracuse University Press, 2011).

Oriental Neighbors: Middle Eastern Jews and Arabs in Mandatory Palestine, co-authored with Moshe Naor (Brandeis University Press, 2016).

Bney Haaretz: Yehudim Ve’Aravim Bitkufat Hamndat  co-authored with Mosge Naor (Jerusalem: Magness Press, 2021)

“The Orphan, the Donor and the Photograph: Humanitarianism and Photography in Post-First World War Jerusalem,” Middle Eastern Studies, Vol. 57 No. 1 (2021): 37-56.

“Negotiating Ottomanism in Times of War: Jerusalem during World War I through the Eyes of a Local Muslim Resident,” International Journal of Middle East Studies, Vol. 40 no. 1 (February 2008): 69-88.

 

Selected Awards

Polonsky Prize for Excellence in Research, Faculty of Humanities, the Hebrew University of Jerusalem (2018)

Yehonatan Shapiro Best Book Award for 2016 (AIS)

 

Teaching

  • Bachelor's degree courses
    • Introduction to Ottoman History – Introductory survey
    • World War I in the Middle East: Social and Political History- Undergraduate elective
    • Cities in the Middle East: History, Politics, Society – Upper-level seminar and upper-level undergraduate elective
    • The Israeli-Palestinian Conflict – Introductory survey
    • The Palestinian Citizens of Israel: Dilemmas of a National Minority – Upper-level seminar and upper-level undergraduate elective
    • Academic and Scientific Writing

 

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Irina Lyan

Dr. Irina Lyan

Asia-Africa Institute
Department of Asian Studies
Faculty main building room no. 6116

Research Fields

  • Korean economic miracle
  • Korean cultural miracle
  • Critical Management Studies
  • Innovation and industrial espionage
  • Fandom Studies

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About

Irina Lyan is an Assistant Professor and the Chair of the Korean Studies Program at the Department of Asian Studies at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. She is the recipient of prestigious scholarships and awards, including visiting postdoctoral fellowships at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, the Freie Universität Berlin, and the University of Oxford. Her research deals with South Korea’s economic miracle, known as “the Miracle on the Han River,” and the cultural miracle, known as “the Korean Wave,” or Hallyu. Irina has published several articles and book chapters on national images, imagery, and imagination, and their impact on the global positioning of Korea.

 

Selected Publications

 Lyan, Irina (2021). “Koreans are the Israelis of the East”: A postcolonial reading of cultural similarities in cross-cultural management. Culture and Organization (link).

 Lyan, Irina (2021).” ‘Start-up Nation’ vs. ‘The Republic of Samsung:’ Power and politics in the partner choice discourse in Israeli-Korean business collaboration.” Critical Perspectives in International Business (link).

Lyan, Irina (2021). "Between two homelands: Diasporic nationalism and academic pilgrimage of the Korean Christian Community in Jerusalem.” S/N Korean Humanities, 7(1), 37-70. (link).

Lyan, Irina and Frenkel, Michal (2020). “Industrial espionage revisited: Host country-foreign MNC legal disputes and the postcolonial imagery.” Organization (link).

Lyan, Irina (2019). “Welcome to Korea Day: From diasporic to fan-nationalism.” International Journal of Communication, 13, 3764-3780 (link).

 

Selected Awards

 

2021-2025       Israeli Science Foundation (ISF) Grant No. 1067/21 (32,400$/4 years)

2020                Korea Foundation Field Research Fellowship Grant

2019                Research Grant, St Antony’s College Committee in Israel, Tel Aviv University (20,000$)

 

Teaching

Modern Korea

Pre-modern Korea

Korean economic miracle

Popular culture in South Korea

Gender and sexuality in Korean cinema and literature

Forum of East Asian Economies

Asia in International Arena

 

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Orna  Naftali

Dr. Orna Naftali

Asia-Africa Institute

Research Fields

  • Children, childhood, and youth in the PRC (1949-present)
  • Schooling and education in the PRC
  • Gender and the family in the PRC
  • Youth nationalism and militarization in the PRC
  • The rights of children and youth in contemporary China
  • Youth legal consciousness in contemporary China

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About

Orna Naftali is a Senior Lecturer in the Department of Asian Studies at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. She is an anthropologist of China, and her research includes  the study of children and youth, schooling and education, gender and the fam... morechildhood and youth, education, gender, and the family in modern and contemporary China.

 

Selected Publications

Children, Rights, and Modernity in China: Raising Self-Governing Citizens (Palgrave Macmillan, 2014).

 Children in China (Polity Press, 2016).

"'Being Chinese Means Becoming Cheap Labour': Education, National Belonging, and Social Positionality among Youth in Contemporary China". The China Quarterly (2021), 245: 51–71

"Celebrating Violence? Children, Youth, and War Education in Maoist China (1949-76)". Journal of the History of Childhood and Youth (2021), 14 (2): 254-273

 "Youth Military Training in China: Learning to 'Love the Army'". Journal of Youth Studies. Published Online first, 2020, pp. 1-19. 10.1080/13676261.2020.1828847

 

Teaching

B.A.

 

"Class and Consumption in China"

"The Anthropology of Contemporary Chinese Society"

“Internet and the Media in Contemporary China”

"Gender and Sexuality in Modern China"

“Contemporary China"

“Women and Gender in Modern China”

"Education and Politics in China"

M.A.

"Resistance and Protest in Contemporary China"

"The Chinese Family under Revolution and Reform (1900-49)"

"The Family and the State in the People's Republic of China (1949-)"

Research Methods of Modern Chinese Society and Politics”

“Constructions of Modernity in Contemporary China: An Anthropological Perspective”

“State and Society in the PRC: Selected Topics”

 

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Nissim Otmazgin

Prof. Nissim Otmazgin

Department of Asian Studies
Asia-Africa Institute

Research Fields

  • Cultural diplomacy in Asia
  • Media and regionalization in East Asia, Japan-Southeast Asian relations
  • Cultural industries of Japan and Korea

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About

Prof. Nissim Otmazgin teaches in  the Hebrew University of Jerusalem’s Department of Asian Studies. He was previously the head of the Institute for Asian and African Studies and is currently the Dean of the Faculty of Humanities.  His research interests include cultural diplomacy in Asia, media regionalization in East and Southeast Asia, Japan-Southeast Asian relations, and cultural industry and cultural policy in Japan and South Korea. He is the author/co-author of 2 monographs and 6 edited volumes on media and society in East Asia. He has also published articles in a number of international journals including International Relations of Asia Pacific, Pacific Affairs, Asia-Pacific Review, Journal of Comparative Policy Analysis, Global Policy, Contemporary Southeast Asia, Asian Perspective, Contemporary Japan, Cross Currents, Kritika Kultura, and Media, Culture & Society.

 

Selected Publications

Otmazgin, Nissim. Regionalizing Culture: The Political Economy of Japanese Popular Culture in Asia, 2013, Honolulu: University of Hawai'i Press, 230 pages

Otmazgin, Nissim and Daliot-Bul, Michal. The Anime Boom in the US: Lessons for Global Creative Industries. 2017, Harvard University Asia Center Press, 212 pages

Otmazgin, Nissim. "An East Asian Public Diplomacy? Lessons from Japan, South Korea, and China" Asian Perspective, 2021, Vol. 45, No. 3

Otmazgin, Nissim. "State Intervention Does Not Support the Development of the Media Sector: Lessons from Korea and Japan," Global Policy, 2020. Vol. 11, June, 40 – 46

Otmazgin, Nissim and Lyan, Irina. “Fan Entrepreneurship: Fandom, Agency, and the Marketing of Hallyu in Israel,” Kritika Kultura, 2018, Issue 32, 288 – 307

 

Selected Awards

(June 2017) The Taiwan Fellowship Award to conduct field research in Taiwan.

(June 2015) The Korea Foundation Award to conduct research in Korea.

(June 2014) The Japan Foundation Award to conduct research in Japan.

(May 2015) Elected as a member of the Israel Young Academy.

(October 2012) Professor Yoram Ben-Porat Presidential Award for Outstanding Young Researcher for the year 2012-2013.

(November 2011) Selected as a member of Israel Academy of Sciences' Young Scientists Forum in the Humanities and Social Sciences.

(September 2010) Sir Zelman Cowen University Fund, for academic exchange fellowship at The University of Sydney.

(2009-2015) During six consecutive years named in the Outstanding Teachers List, based on students’ annual evaluation survey.

(October 2007) The Sixth Iue Asia-Pacific Research Prize for outstanding dissertation written on society and culture in Asia. Information about this prize available here.

 

Teaching

Bachelor's degree courses

Japanese Politics, Society and Foreign Relations.

Japan-Southeast Asian Relations in the Modern Period.

International Relations of East Asia (at the Dept. of IR, together with Dr. Galia Press-Barnathan)

Honors Seminar in Japanese and Korean Studies

Master's degree courses

Research Methods in Japanese Politics and Society.

Global Cities and Middle Classes in East Asia (together with Dr. Orna Naftali)
 

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Ori Sachmon

Dr. Ori Sachmon

Faculty main building Room no.5325

Research Fields

  • Arabic dialectology
  • Palestinian Arabic
  • Yemeni Arabic
  • Arabic linguistics

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About

Ori Shachmon is an Arabic dialectologist engaged in the study of spoken Arabic dialects. She deals mainly - though not exclusively - with Levantine and Yemeni Arabic. These two clusters of dialects - the former of which is spoken in the immediate geographic vicinity of Israel and the latter of which is found deep in the Southern Arabian peninsula - are essentially distinct in terms of linguistic history, internal development, and contact circumstances. Shachmon’s research is primarily based on first-hand materials collected through linguistic fieldwork among native speakers of the dialects she studies.

 

Selected Publications

Shachmon, Ori (to appear) Temōnit - The Jewish varieties of Yemeni Arabic. Wiesbaden: Otto Harrasowitz (the Semitica Viva series).

Shachmon, Ori and Michal Marmorstein (2021) “The introductive baka/bāki in Rural Palestinian Arabic”. Journal of Semitic Studies 66,1: 185-214. 

Shachmon, Ori and Noam Faust (to appear) “Avoidance of final monopositional vowels: Evidence from the k-dialects of Yemen”. Brill's Journal of Afroasiatic Languages and Linguistics 12,1.

Shachmon, Ori and Elitzur Bar-Asher Siegal (to appear) “The derivatives of Barth`s Law in the light of modern Arabic dialects”. Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies.

Shachmon, Ori and Tom Fogel (to appear) “Phonetic, Analytic and Substitute Writing - Patterns and pitfalls in Goitein’s Yemenite archive”. Jerusalem Studies in Arabic and Islam.

 

Selected Awards

2010 The Golda Meir Fellowship (The Hebrew University of Jerusalem)

2011 The Ben-Zvi institute prize for the study of Jewish Communities in the East

2019 Award for excellence in teaching

 

Teaching

Bachelor's degree courses: Basic Arabic grammar;  Palestinian Dialects; Linguistic fieldwork (applied workshop); Modern Arabic literature

Master's degree courses: Advanced Topics in Arabic Dialectology; Topics in Arabic Socio-linguistics; Yemen: A window into the Arabic language

 

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Ron Shaham

Prof. Ron Shaham

Asia-Africa Institute
Department of Islam and Middle Eastern Studies

Research Fields

  • Islamic law (especially modern)
  • Islamic modern legal systems
  • Modern Islamic thought

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About

Prof. Shaham's general field is Islamic legal history (mainly modern). He has published extensively on the Sharia courts and qadis in modern Egypt, Egyptian family law reform, the legal status of non-Muslims in modern Islamic societies, the ʿulamaʾ and reform in the modern period and Islamic law in Israel.

 

Selected Publications

Family and the Courts in Modern Egypt (Brill, 1997)

The Expert Witness in Islamic Courts: Medicine and Crafts in the Service of Law (University of Chicago Press, 2010)

Rethinking Islamic Legal Modernism: the Teaching of Yusuf al-Qaradawi (Brill, 2018)

Editor of Law, Custom and Statute in the Muslim World: Studies in Honor of Aharon Layish (Brill, 2007)

 

Selected Awards

1988 DAAD (West-Germany), for research in Tubingen

Lady Davis post-doctoral fellowship

Fulbright post-doctoral scholarship

The Golda Meir Fellowship

2009  Fulbright Specialist Program; selected to spend one month at Central Lakes College, Brainerd, Minnesota

 

Teaching

Bachelor's degree courses

Introduction to Islamic Law

Islam and the State (B.A. seminar)

The Family in Modern Islamic Societies (Textual Course in Arabic)

The Modernists in Islam (Textual Course in Arabic)

Readings in Modern Legal Opinions (Fatwas)

Islamic Law in the State of Israel (Textual Course in Arabic) 

Master's degree courses

Islam and the State (M.A. seminar in English)

Islamic Attitudes to Other Religions and to Israel (Textual Course in Arabic)

The Inheritance System in Islamic Societies (Textual Course in Arabic)  

 

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Gideon Shelach-Lavi

Prof. Gideon Shelach-Lavi

Asia-Africa Institute
Department of Asian Studies

Research Fields

  • The beginning of agriculture and sedentary way-of-live in North China
  • The development of complex societies in China
  • Interregional interactions among prehistoric societies in China and Mongolia
  • Systematic regional archaeologic surveys
  • Long-walls ('great walls') in China and Mongolia

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About

Gideon Shelach-Lavi is the Louis Freiberg Professor of East Asian Studies at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. He is an Archaeologist who specializes in the archaeology of North China, where his is conducting field work. He recently completed the Fuxin Regional Archaeological Project in Liaoning province, China and has started a new regional project in Shandong province. He is also directing the Long-Wall project in Northeast Mongolia, which is funded by an ERC advanced grant (see: https://thewall.huji.ac.il/ ).

 

Selected Publications

Shelach, G. 2015. The Archaeology of Ancient China: From Prehistory to the Han Dynasty. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

Shelach-Lavi, G., Honeychurch, W. and Chunag, A (2020). “Does extra-large equal extra-ordinary? The ‘Wall of Chinggis Khan’ from a multidimensional perspective.” Humanities and Social Sciences Communications 7, 22. https://doi.org/10.1057/s41599-020-0524-2

Shelach-Lavi G., M. Teng, Y. Goldsmith, I. Wachtel, C.J. Stevens, O. Marder, X. Wan, X. Wu, D. Tu, R. Shavit, P. Polissar, H. Xu, D.Q. Fuller (2019) “Sedentism and plant cultivation in northeast China emerged during affluent conditions.” PLoS ONE. 14(7): e0218751. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0218751.

Shelach-Lavi, G. and Tu Dongdong, 2017. “Food, Pots and Socio-Economic Transformation: The Beginning and Intensification of Pottery Production in North China.” Archaeological Research in Asia. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ara.2017.10.001

Shelach, G. and Y. Jaffe , 2014. “The Earliest States in China: A long-Term Trajectory Approach.” Journal of Archaeological Research. 22 (4): 327-364. https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s10814-014-9074-8

 

Selected Awards

1998-2003, Chiang Ching-kuo Foundation Grant for the Project: Regional Lifeway and Cultural Remains in the Northern Corridor (in collaboration with Prof. K. Linduff and Prof. Zhang Zhongpei). $145,000

2001-2004, Israel Science Foundation grant for the study, Social Change and the Rise of Pastoral Economy in Northeast China c. 2200-600 BCE (no. 893/01). $97,600.

2003-2008, NSF award for Chifeng International Archaeological Research Project. Award Number BSC-0106048 (co-PI with K. Linduff and R. Drennan). $166,000.

2009-2011, National Geographic Society, Committee for Research and Exploration, Origins of Agriculture and Sedentary Communities in Northeast China (grant no. 8614-09). $19,920.

2011-2015, Israel Science Foundation grant for the research, The Origins of Agriculture and Sedentary Communities in Northeast China (no. 502\11), $ 267,430 (234,000 NIS a year for 4 years).

2017-2021, Israel Science Foundation grant for the research, What’s Cooking? Long-Term Changes in Diet Habits, Economic Strategies and Social Organization in East China (no. 728/17;  300,000 NIS a year for 4 years; Total 1,200,000 NIS).

2020-2025. ERC Advanced Grant "The Wall: People and Ecology in Medieval Mongolia and China" (proposal no. 882894) (EUR 2,499,75).

 

Teaching

Introduction to the History and Culture of Traditional China

Art and Architecture in China

Personal, social and group identities in China

Roads, boarders and walls: the archaeology of movement and space (MA)

“Use the Past to Serve the Present” – Representations and Manipulations of the Past in Modern China (MA)

 

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Michael Shenkar

Prof. Michael Shenkar

Asia-Africa Institute
Department of Islam and Middle Eastern Studies

Research Fields

  • Archaeology
  • Art
  • Religions of the pre-Islamic Iran
  • Central Asia
  • Zoroastrianism (with a particular focus on religious iconography)
  • Culture of the Eurasian nomads
  • Sogdian civilization and the "Silk Roads"

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About

Michael Shenkar (PhD, the Hebrew University of Jerusalem) is an Associate Professor of Pre-Islamic Iranian studies at the Department of Islamic and Middle Eastern Studies, the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. Since 2014, he has been directing (together with Sharof Kurbanov of the Tajik Academy of Sciences) the excavations of the Sogdian site Sanjar-Shah in northern Tajikistan.

 

Selected Publications

Shenkar, M. (2014), Intangible Spirits and Graven Images. Iconography of Deities in the Pre-Islamic Iranian World, Boston—Leiden: Brill.

Shenkar, M. (2014), “The Epic of Farāmarz in the Panjikent Paintings”, Bulletin of the Asia Institute 24, pp. 67-85.

Shenkar, M. (2015), “Rethinking Sasanian Iconoclasm”, Journal of the American Oriental Society 135.3, pp. 471-498.

Shenkar, M. (2017), “The Great Iranian Divide: Between Aniconic West and Anthropomorphic East”, Religion 47/3, pp. 378-398.

Shenkar, M. (2020), “The Origin of the Sogdian Civic Communities (nāf)”, Journal of the Economic and Social History of the Orient 63.3, pp. 357-388.

 

Selected Awards

Alon Fellowship for Outstanding Young Faculty by the Israeli Council for Higher Education

Prix Ghirshman of the Academie des Inscriptions et Belles-Lettres, Institut de France, Paris

Alexander von Humboldt Research Fellowship at the German Archaeological Institute, Berlin

Max Schlomiuk Award for Outstanding PhD Thesis, Hebrew University of Jerusalem

 

Teaching

Introduction to Zoroastrianism (38272).

Civilizations and Cultures in Pre-Islamic Iran and Central Asia (38257). 

Kingship and Royal Court in Pre-Islamic Iran (38477).

Panjikent – Life and Death of a Sogdian City (5th-8th centuries CE) (38131).

Public Space and Shaping of Memory in Sasanian Iran (38132).

The Sasanian Empire in Light of its Material Culture (38273).

Masters of the “Silk Road” – the Rise and Fall of the Sogdian Culture (38476).

The Arab Conquest of Iran and Central Asia (38218).

Cultural Contacts Along the “Silk Road”: From China to Sogdiana (4th-8th centuries CE) (38962).

Eurasian Nomads and their Culture in the Pre-Islamic Period (38874).

Eurasian Nomads and their Culture in World History (38717), together with Prof. Michal Biran.

The Sogdian Civilization on the “Silk Roads” (first millennium CE) (38802).

 

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Adam  Silverstein

Prof. Adam Silverstein

Asia-Africa Institute
Department of Islam and Middle Eastern Studies

Research Fields

  • Near and Middle Eastern History
  • Abrahamic Religions
  • Continuities between the ancient Near East, late antique societies, and pre-modern Islamic civilization.

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About

Prof. Adam Silverstein is a historian of the Near and Middle East, with a particular focus on Islamic civilization in comparative context. He trained at the University of Cambridge (earning his Ph.D. there in 2002). From 2002 through 2005, Silverstein held a British Academy post-doctoral fellowship at Cambridge. Subsequently, Prof. Silverstein held positions at the University of Oxford, at King's College London, and at Bar Ilan University. Prof. Silverstein joined the Hebrew University in 2021.

 

Selected Publications

Postal Systems in the Pre-Modern Islamic World, Cambridge, 2007

Islamic History: A Very Short Introduction, Oxford, 2010

Veiling Esther, Unveiling her Story: The Reception of a Biblical Book in Islamic Lands, Oxford, 2018

The Oxford Handbook of the Abrahamic Religions (ed. with Guy Stroumsa), Oxford, 2015

Late Antiquity: Eastern Perspectives (ed. with Teresa Bernheimer), Oxford: Oxbow, 2012

 

Teaching

Introduction to Islam

Topics in Early Islamic History

Islamic Geography

Islam as an Abrahamic Religion

Quranic figures in Islamic Historiography


 

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Yuval Tal

Dr. Yuval Tal

Romance Studies
European Forum at the Hebrew University
Literature Institute
History Institute
Asia-Africa Institute
Room 6216, main building

Research Fields

  • Modern French History
  • European Colonialism
  • French Republicanism
  • North African History
  • Sephardi and Mizrahi Jews
  • Gender and Sexuality
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About

Yuval Tal is a historian of modern France and the French colonial Empire in North Africa. His research brings the history of Christians, Muslims, and Jews from across Europe and the Mediterranean into a shared analytical framework. This desegregated method allows him to bridge the divide between national and imperial histories of Europe and bring into view sublimated ethnic premises and biases that haunt European liberal democracies.

 

Selected Publications

“The ‘Latin’ Melting-Pot: Ethnorepublican Thinking and Immigrant Assimilation in and through Colonial Algeria,” French Historical Studies 44:1 (2021), 85-118.

“The Social Logic of Colonial Anti-Judaism: Revisiting the Anti-Jewish Crisis in French Algeria, 1889-1902," Studies in Contemporary Jewry 30 (2018), 17-36.

 

Teaching

Gender and Law in France, 1870-2022

Nationalism and Colonialism in Modern France 

After Empire: Decolonization and the Remaking of Europe

The Right to the City in Modern Paris: Race, Sexuality, and Capitalism

 

 

 

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