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}}

Horizons in Iraq’s History / Episode Three: The Jews of Iraq during the Monarchy

Photo: Detail from the cover of Orit Bashkin’s “New Babylonians: A History of of Jews in Modern Iraq"
Share
{{(itemEpisode.isfavorite?'removetofav':'addtofav')|translate}}
Horizons in Iraq’s History
Episode Three: The Jews of Iraq during the Monarchy
{{langos=='en'?('24/10/2024' | todate):('24/10/2024' | artodate)}} - Issue 11.2

A discussion with Professor Orit Bashkin of the University of Chicago, on the history of Iraqi Jews during the period of the Hashemite Monarchy. Her research focuses on the history of modern Iraq, the Jews of the Middle East, the Arab cultural revival movement, and the connections between modern Arab history, memory and literature.

Watch:

Guests

Orit Bashkin
Orit Bashkin

Historian researching the lives of Iraqi Jews in Israel.

Professor Orit Bashkin is a historian who works on the intellectual, social and cultural history of the modern Middle East. She received her Ph.D. from Princeton University (2004), writing a thesis on Iraqi intellectual history under the supervision of Professors Robert Tignor and Samah Selim, and her BA (1995) and MA (1999) from Tel Aviv University. Since her graduation, she has been working as a professor of modern Middle Eastern history in the Department of Near Eastern Languages and Civilizations at the University of Chicago. Her publications deal with Iraqi history, the history of Iraqi Jews, the Arab cultural revival movement (the nahda) in the late 19th century, and the connections between modern Arab history and Arabic literature.

Her current research project explores the lives of Iraqi Jews in Israel. Her graduate students work on a range of issues: cultural history of Ottoman Iraq, the British mandates in Trans Jordan and Iraq, leisure in the Arab world, Mizrahi women, Syrian diplomacy, the Ottoman press, and Arab political thought.

At the University of Chicago, she teaches classes on nationalism, colonialism and postcolonialism in the Middle East, on modern Islamic civilization, and on Israeli history.

read more