Status Audio Magazine

{{langos!='ar'?"Issue "+guestData[0].issueNb:"عدد "+guestData[0].issueNb}}
{{langos!='ar'?item.title:item.arTitle}}
{{langos!='ar'?item.caption:item.arCaption}}
{{langos!='ar'?item.title:item.arTitle}}

CritiCAL / Mosul Before and After ISIS

Photo by Peter Biro, European Union 2018
Share
{{(itemEpisode.isfavorite?'removetofav':'addtofav')|translate}}
CritiCAL
Mosul Before and After ISIS
{{langos=='en'?('24/01/2019' | todate):('24/01/2019' | artodate)}} - Issue 6.1
Hosted by UC Berkeley CMES

A conversation between Omar Mohamed of “Mosul Eye” and Charles Hirschkind, Professor of Anthropology at UC Berkeley.

Watch their conversation here:

Guests

Omar Mohamed
Omar Mohamed

Omar Mohammed is a professor of history and known for reporting on ISIS activities in Iraq.

Omar Mohammed, a native of Mosul, Iraq, was present when the Islamic State (or “ISIS”) forces occupied the city in June 2014. He had been teaching history at the University of Mosul and decided that, for the sake of future historians, he would record the Islamic State’s activities, including the destruction of local monuments, persecution of religious minorities, execution of political dissidents, and other atrocities, at the risk of his own life. These reports were published in English and Arabic in an anonymous blog called “the Mosul Eye.” As a historian and lecturer at the University of Mosul, he focuses his scholarly work on conceptual history and research dealing with local historiographies and narratives, micro histories and Orientalism. Omar is a regular media commentator on Iraq, has an MA in Middle East History from the University of Mosul, and was named 2013 Researcher of the Year by Iraq’s Ministry of Higher Education and Scientific Research. His doctoral research explores history and historians in 19th and 20th century Mosul. He now lives in exile in Europe.

read more
Charles Hirschkind
Charles Hirschkind

Charles Hirschkind is associate professor of anthropology at the University of California, Berkeley.

Charles Hirschkind is associate professor of anthropology at the University of California, Berkeley. His research interests concern religious practice, media technologies, and emergent forms of political community in the urban Middle East and Europe. He has published two books, The Ethical Soundscape: Cassette Sermons and Islamic Counterpublics (Columbia 2006) and Powers of the Secular Modern: Talal Asad and his Interlocutors (co-edited with David Scott, Stanford 2005). His forthcoming book, titled A Feeling for History: Romanticism, Islam, and the Tradition of Andalusismo (Chicago), is based in southern Spain and explores some of the different ways in which Europe’s Islamic past inhabits its present, unsettling contemporary efforts to secure Europe’s Christian civilizational identity. He has published extensively on religion, politics, and history in the Middle East and Europe.

read more