Sanskrit
The courses below are offered through the Department of Middle Eastern, South Asian, and African Studies.
For questions about specific courses, contact the department.
Language Placement
African Languages: Mariame Sy, 310 Knox
212-851-2439
sms2168 [[at]] columbia [[dot]] edu (sms2168[at]columbia[dot]edu)
Web: http://www.columbia.edu/cu/mesaas/languages/african/
Arabic: Taoufik Ben-Amor, 308 Knox
212-854-2895
tb46 [[at]] columbia [[dot]] edu (tb46[at]columbia[dot]edu)
Web: http://www.columbia.edu/cu/mesaas/languages/arabic/
Hebrew: Rina Kreitman, 413 Knox
212-854-6519
rk2617 [[at]] columbia [[dot]] edu (rk2617[at]columbia[dot]edu)
Web: http://www.columbia.edu/cu/mesaas/languages/hebrew/
Hindi-Urdu: Rakesh Ranjan, 411 Knox
212-851-4107
rr2574 [[at]] columbia [[dot]] edu (rr2574[at]columbia[dot]edu)
Web: http://www.columbia.edu/cu/mesaas/languages/hindiurdu/
Persian: Ghazzal Dabiri, 313 Knox
212-854-6664
gd2287 [[at]] columbia [[dot]] edu (gd2287[at]columbia[dot]edu)
Web: http://www.columbia.edu/cu/mesaas/languages/persian/
Sanskrit: Guy Leavitt, 311 Knox
212-854-1304
gl2392 [[at]] columbia [[dot]] edu
Web: http://www.columbia.edu/cu/mesaas/languages/sanskrit/
Tamil: Sam Sudanandha, 309 Knox
212-854-4702
dss2121 [[at]] columbia [[dot]] edu (dss2121[at]columbia[dot]edu)
Web: http://www.columbia.edu/cu/mesaas/languages/tamil/
Turkish: Zuleyha Colak, 313 Knox
212-854-0473
zc2208 [[at]] columbia [[dot]] edu (zc2208[at]columbia[dot]edu)
Web: http://www.columbia.edu/cu/mesaas/languages/turkishottoman/
Placement Test
Enrollment in language courses is, in some cases, determined by placement examinations. Contact the department or visit the department's website for additional information. Please note: language courses may not be taken Pass/Fail nor may they be audited.
For questions about specific courses, contact the department.
Courses
Readings in translation and discussion of texts of Middle Eastern and Indian origin. Readings may include the Quran, Islamic philosophy, Sufi poetry, the Upanishads, Buddhist sutras, the Bhagavad Gita, Indian epics and drama, and Gandhis Autobiography.
Course Number
AHUM1399V003Format
In-PersonPoints
4 ptsSpring 2025
Times/Location
Tu 16:10-18:00Section/Call Number
003/11369Enrollment
25 of 22Instructor
Wael HallaqReadings in translation and discussion of texts of Middle Eastern and Indian origin. Readings may include the Quran, Islamic philosophy, Sufi poetry, the Upanishads, Buddhist sutras, the Bhagavad Gita, Indian epics and drama, and Gandhis Autobiography.
Course Number
AHUM1399V004Format
In-PersonPoints
4 ptsSpring 2025
Times/Location
Mo 10:10-12:00Section/Call Number
004/15293Enrollment
21 of 22Instructor
Sarah bin TyeerCourse Number
AHUM1399W001Points
4 ptsSpring 2025
Times/Location
Tu 09:00-10:50Section/Call Number
001/00249Enrollment
20 of 20Instructor
Nathanael ShelleyCourse Number
AHUM1399W002Format
In-PersonPoints
4 ptsSpring 2025
Times/Location
Th 16:10-18:00Section/Call Number
002/00246Enrollment
25 of 25Instructor
Rohini ShuklaThis course explores the core classical literature in Chinese, Japanese and Korean Humanities. The main objective of the course is to discover the meanings that these literature offer, not just for the original audience or for the respective cultures, but for us. As such, it is not a survey or a lecture-based course. Rather than being taught what meanings are to be derived from the texts, we explore meanings together, informed by in-depth reading and thorough ongoing discussion.
Course Number
AHUM1400V001Format
In-PersonPoints
4 ptsSpring 2025
Times/Location
Mo 14:10-16:00Section/Call Number
001/11658Enrollment
20 of 20Instructor
Seong-Uk KimThis course explores the core classical literature in Chinese, Japanese and Korean Humanities. The main objective of the course is to discover the meanings that these literature offer, not just for the original audience or for the respective cultures, but for us. As such, it is not a survey or a lecture-based course. Rather than being taught what meanings are to be derived from the texts, we explore meanings together, informed by in-depth reading and thorough ongoing discussion.
Course Number
AHUM1400V002Format
In-PersonPoints
4 ptsSpring 2025
Times/Location
We 14:10-16:00Section/Call Number
002/00576Enrollment
20 of 20Instructor
David MoermanThis course explores the core classical literature in Chinese, Japanese and Korean Humanities. The main objective of the course is to discover the meanings that these literature offer, not just for the original audience or for the respective cultures, but for us. As such, it is not a survey or a lecture-based course. Rather than being taught what meanings are to be derived from the texts, we explore meanings together, informed by in-depth reading and thorough ongoing discussion.
Course Number
AHUM1400V003Format
In-PersonPoints
4 ptsSpring 2025
Times/Location
Tu 16:10-18:00Section/Call Number
003/17289Enrollment
20 of 20Instructor
Yifan ZhangIntroduces distinctive aesthetic traditions of China, Japan, and Korea--their similarities and differences--through an examination of the visual significance of selected works of painting, sculpture, architecture, and other arts in relation to the history, culture, and religions of East Asia.
Course Number
AHUM2604V001Format
In-PersonPoints
3 ptsSpring 2025
Times/Location
Tu 14:40-15:55Th 14:40-15:55Section/Call Number
001/15695Enrollment
22 of 22Instructor
Yeongik SeoIntroduces distinctive aesthetic traditions of China, Japan, and Korea--their similarities and differences--through an examination of the visual significance of selected works of painting, sculpture, architecture, and other arts in relation to the history, culture, and religions of East Asia.
Course Number
AHUM2604V002Format
In-PersonPoints
3 ptsSpring 2025
Times/Location
Mo 13:10-14:25We 13:10-14:25Section/Call Number
002/15095Enrollment
25 of 22Instructor
Yi-bang LiThis course is a requirement for AMEC majors and should be taken in the junior year. In this semester
students are introduced to Asian and Middle Eastern studies as academic disciplines and explore
theories and methods of interdisciplinary research. Through a variety of readings and workshops,
students gain experience discussing their area of interest comparatively and practice synthesizing work
from related fields.
Course Number
ASCM3991X001Format
In-PersonPoints
4 ptsSpring 2025
Times/Location
We 16:10-18:00Section/Call Number
001/00858Enrollment
7 of 14Instructor
Nathanael Shelley“Pan Africanist” ideologies were very diverse from Garveyism, Negritude to the various African America, Caribbean and African discourses of “neo-pharaohnism” and “Ethiopianism.” This seminar explores how Black leaders, intellectuals, and artists chose to imagine Black (Africans and people of African descent) as a global community from the late 19th century to the present. It examines their attempts to chart a course of race, modernity, and emancipation in unstable and changing geographies of empire, nation, and state. Particular attention will be given to manifestations identified as their common history and destiny and how such a distinctive historical experience has created a unique body of reflections on and cultural productions about modernity, religion, class, gender, and sexuality, in a context of domination and oppression.
Course Number
HSME4154G001Format
In-PersonPoints
4 ptsSpring 2025
Times/Location
Th 12:10-14:00Section/Call Number
001/11408Enrollment
15 of 15Instructor
Mamadou DioufThis graduate seminar will expose students to major themes and issues in the study of South Asia. The course will provide a serious intellectual foundation for students wishing to pursue specialized, directed research in the region.
Broadly speaking, themes for consideration include: cultural history and early modernity; capitalism and political economy; genealogies of political thought; anticolonialism; caste and religion; and gender and feminist history.
The thematic focus of the seminar will change each time it is taught. However, the pedagogical aims of the seminar will remain constant. That is, to maintain a focus on discussions about the archive; conducting field research; framing a robust research question, and more.
Course Number
HSME6056G001Format
In-PersonPoints
4 ptsSpring 2025
Times/Location
Tu 16:10-18:00Section/Call Number
001/15310Enrollment
16 of 20Instructor
Humeira IqtidarAnupama RaoCourse Number
MDES1102W001Format
In-PersonPoints
4 ptsSpring 2025
Times/Location
Mo 13:10-14:00Tu 13:10-14:00We 13:10-14:00Th 13:10-14:00Section/Call Number
001/11321Enrollment
8 of 20Instructor
Jay RameshAn introduction to the language of classical and modern Arabic literature. No P/D/F or R credit is allowed for this class.
Course Number
MDES1210W001Format
In-PersonPoints
5 ptsSpring 2025
Times/Location
Mo 11:40-12:45Tu 11:40-12:45We 11:40-12:45Th 11:40-12:45Section/Call Number
001/12997Enrollment
11 of 12Instructor
Ouijdane AbsiPrerequisites: First Year Arabic I or instructor permission. An introduction to the language of classical and modern Arabic literature. No P/D/F or R credit is allowed for this class.
Course Number
MDES1211W001Format
In-PersonPoints
5 ptsSpring 2025
Times/Location
Mo 10:10-11:15Tu 10:10-11:15We 10:10-11:15Th 10:10-11:15Section/Call Number
001/12999Enrollment
7 of 12Instructor
Nasr AbdoPrerequisites: First Year Arabic I or instructor permission. An introduction to the language of classical and modern Arabic literature. No P/D/F or R credit is allowed for this class.
Course Number
MDES1211W002Format
In-PersonPoints
5 ptsSpring 2025
Times/Location
Mo 11:40-12:45Tu 11:40-12:45We 11:40-12:45Th 11:40-12:45Section/Call Number
002/13001Enrollment
8 of 12Instructor
Rym BettaiebPrerequisites: First Year Arabic I or instructor permission. An introduction to the language of classical and modern Arabic literature. No P/D/F or R credit is allowed for this class.
Course Number
MDES1211W003Format
In-PersonPoints
5 ptsSpring 2025
Times/Location
Mo 14:40-15:45Tu 14:40-15:45We 14:40-15:45Th 14:40-15:45Section/Call Number
003/13002Enrollment
12 of 12Instructor
May AhmarCourse Number
MDES1302W001Format
In-PersonPoints
4 ptsSpring 2025
Times/Location
Mo 16:10-18:00We 16:10-18:00Section/Call Number
001/11283Enrollment
2 of 10Instructor
Charry KaramanoukianCourse Number
MDES1309W001Format
In-PersonPoints
4 ptsSpring 2025
Times/Location
Mo 14:10-16:00We 14:10-16:00Section/Call Number
001/17675Enrollment
1 of 10Instructor
Charry KaramanoukianCourse Number
MDES1402W001Format
In-PersonPoints
4 ptsSpring 2025
Times/Location
Mo 09:10-10:00Tu 09:10-10:00We 09:10-10:00Th 09:10-10:00Section/Call Number
001/11319Enrollment
11 of 20Instructor
Jay RameshPrerequisites: MDES UN1501, or the equivalent, based on performance on the placement test. Continued introduction to Hebrew, with equal emphasis on all languages skills. (See MDES UN1501.) No P/D/F or R credit is allowed for this class.
Course Number
MDES1502W001Format
In-PersonPoints
5 ptsSpring 2025
Times/Location
Mo 08:50-09:55Tu 08:50-09:55We 08:50-09:55Th 08:50-09:55Section/Call Number
001/11452Enrollment
10 of 12Instructor
Illan GonenPrerequisites: MDES UN1501, or the equivalent, based on performance on the placement test. Continued introduction to Hebrew, with equal emphasis on all languages skills. (See MDES UN1501.) No P/D/F or R credit is allowed for this class.
Course Number
MDES1502W002Format
In-PersonPoints
5 ptsSpring 2025
Times/Location
Mo 10:10-11:15Tu 10:10-11:15We 10:10-11:15Th 10:10-11:15Section/Call Number
002/11457Enrollment
5 of 12Instructor
Illan GonenCourse Number
MDES1602W001Format
In-PersonPoints
5 ptsSpring 2025
Times/Location
Mo 16:10-17:15Tu 16:10-17:15We 16:10-17:15Th 16:10-17:15Section/Call Number
001/13332Enrollment
12 of 15Instructor
Aftab AhmadCourse Number
MDES1609W001Format
In-PersonPoints
5 ptsSpring 2025
Times/Location
Mo 14:40-15:45Tu 14:40-15:45We 14:40-15:45Th 14:40-15:45Section/Call Number
001/13325Enrollment
15 of 15Instructor
Rakesh RanjanPrerequisite: one semester of prior coursework in Urdu for Heritage Speakers I (UN1615) in the Fall semester, or the instructor’s permission. This is an accelerated course for students of South Asian origin who already possess a knowledge of basic vocabulary and limited speaking, listening, reading and writing skills in Urdu. For instance, they should be able to converse, comprehend, read and write on familiar topics in Urdu such as: self, family, likes, dislikes and immediate surroundings. This course will focus on developing knowledge of the basic grammar of Urdu and vocabulary enrichment by exposing students to a variety of cultural and social topics related to aspects of daily life; and formal and informal registers. Students will be able to read and discuss simple Urdu texts and write about a variety of everyday topics by the end of the semester. No P/D/F or R credit is allowed for this class.
Course Number
MDES1615W001Format
In-PersonPoints
5 ptsSpring 2025
Times/Location
Mo 14:40-15:45Tu 14:40-15:45We 14:40-15:45Th 14:40-15:45Section/Call Number
001/13324Enrollment
12 of 15Instructor
Aftab AhmadThis course introduces students to South Asia through
an analysis of the heterogeneity, richness, and
complexity of the region’s conflicted pasts. Our
historical scope is vast and ambitious, starting with the
earliest urban settlements in about 2000BCE and
ending in the present. Though focused on “South
Asia,” the course problematizes the bounded areal
model by emphasizing the region’s enduring
connections to Eurasia, Africa, Southeast Asia, and
the broader Indian Ocean world. With connected
history as our method, the course asks students to
grapple with South Asia’s literary, religious, and
political histories as kinetic processes. This allows us to
ask probing questions about issues that have had, and
continue to have, major implications for the region––
and the world––today: sovereignty, power, gender,
community, devotion, piety, secularism, democracy,
violence, and the nation itself.
Course Number
MDES1630W001Format
In-PersonPoints
4 ptsSpring 2025
Times/Location
Mo 13:10-14:25We 13:10-14:25Section/Call Number
001/17554Enrollment
90 of 90Instructor
Jonathan PetersonDiscussion section to accompany the course, MDES UN1630 Introduction to South Asia.
Course Number
MDES1631W001Format
In-PersonPoints
0 ptsSpring 2025
Times/Location
We 17:10-18:00Section/Call Number
001/17788Enrollment
15 of 15Instructor
Jonathan PetersonDiscussion section to accompany the course, MDES UN1630 Introduction to South Asia.
Course Number
MDES1631W002Format
In-PersonPoints
0 ptsSpring 2025
Times/Location
We 18:10-19:00Section/Call Number
002/17789Enrollment
4 of 15Instructor
Jonathan PetersonDiscussion section to accompany the course, MDES UN1630 Introduction to South Asia.
Course Number
MDES1631W003Format
In-PersonPoints
0 ptsSpring 2025
Times/Location
Th 10:10-11:00Section/Call Number
003/17790Enrollment
7 of 15Instructor
Jonathan PetersonDiscussion section to accompany the course, MDES UN1630 Introduction to South Asia.
Course Number
MDES1631W004Format
In-PersonPoints
0 ptsSpring 2025
Times/Location
Th 11:10-12:00Section/Call Number
004/17791Enrollment
2 of 15Instructor
Jonathan PetersonDiscussion section to accompany the course, MDES UN1630 Introduction to South Asia.
Course Number
MDES1631W005Format
In-PersonPoints
0 ptsSpring 2025
Times/Location
Fr 10:10-11:00Section/Call Number
005/17792Enrollment
2 of 15Instructor
Jonathan PetersonDiscussion section to accompany the course, MDES UN1630 Introduction to South Asia.
Course Number
MDES1631W006Format
In-PersonPoints
0 ptsSpring 2025
Times/Location
Fr 11:10-12:00Section/Call Number
006/17793Enrollment
4 of 15Instructor
Jonathan PetersonCourse Number
MDES1702W001Format
In-PersonPoints
4 ptsSpring 2025
Times/Location
Mo 15:10-16:00Tu 15:10-16:00We 15:10-16:00Th 15:10-16:00Section/Call Number
001/13380Enrollment
14 of 20Instructor
Saeed HonarmandPrerequisites: MDES UN1901 An introduction to the written and spoken language of Turkey. No P/D/F or R credit is allowed for this class.
Course Number
MDES1902W001Format
In-PersonPoints
4 ptsSpring 2025
Times/Location
Mo 14:10-16:00We 14:10-16:00Section/Call Number
001/11201Enrollment
7 of 15Instructor
Zuleyha ColakThis seminar investigates the concepts of ethnicity, race, and identity, in both theory and practice,
through a comparative survey of several case studies from the Pre-Modern history of the Middle East.
The course focuses on symbols of identity and difference, interpreting them through a variety of
analytical tools, and evaluating the utility of each as part of an ongoing exploration of the subject. The
survey considers theories of ethnicity and race, as well as their critics, and includes cases from the
Ancient World (c. 1000 BCE) through the Old Regime (c. 1800 CE).
Students in this course will gain a familiarity with major theories of social difference and alterity, and
utilize them to interpret and analyze controversial debates about social politics and identity from the
history of the Middle East, including ancient ethnicity, historical racism, Arab identity, pluralism in the
Islamic Empire, and slavery, among others. In addition, students will spend much of the semester
developing a specialized case study of their own on a historical community of interest. All of the case
studies will be presented in a showcase at the end of the semester.
All assigned readings for the course will be in English. Primary sources will be provided in translation.
The course meets once a week and sessions are two hours long.
Course Number
MDES2000W001Format
In-PersonPoints
4 ptsSpring 2025
Times/Location
Tu 16:10-18:00Section/Call Number
001/00250Enrollment
8 of 20Instructor
Nathanael ShelleyContemporary discussions about racism have tended to focus on the experience of North Atlantic slave trade, and theoretical debates tend to rely upon American experiences of racialization. However, there is substantial variation in the contours of racism across time and space. Relatedly, strategies for resistance to racism also vary significantly. It is important to think through the political and theoretical implications of potential differences in experiences and forms of racism in the global south. To this end, this course attempts to provide an insight into both historical and ideational variation. We will engage with historical research as well as the political ideas of particular thinkers grappling with the challenge of modern racism.
At the same time as exploring the variation in historical, regional and ideational debates we will pay considerable attention to the arguments proposed by many global south thinkers about homogenization under global capitalism. The mutual imbrication of modern racism and capitalism has been an important concern for many 20th century Global South thinkers and it is useful to think through their arguments regarding simultaneous homogenization and differentiation built into capitalism. While ‘non-Western’ or Global South thinkers have addressed questions of race and racism in important ways, some have also voiced racist views of their own. The course draws upon scholarship in Postcolonial Theory, Black Marxist and Radical thought, and Comparative Political Theory, as well recent comparative historical research on questions of slavery and racialization.
Course Number
MDES2046W001Format
In-PersonPoints
3 ptsSpring 2025
Times/Location
Th 10:10-11:25Tu 10:10-11:25Section/Call Number
001/17604Enrollment
10 of 20Instructor
Humeira IqtidarPrerequisites: MDES W1210-W1211 or the equivalent. A continuation of the study of the language of contemporary writing. No P/D/F or R credit is allowed for this class.
Course Number
MDES2201W001Format
In-PersonPoints
5 ptsSpring 2025
Times/Location
Mo 10:10-11:15Tu 10:10-11:15We 10:10-11:15Th 10:10-11:15Section/Call Number
001/13003Enrollment
6 of 12Instructor
Ouijdane AbsiPrerequisites: MDES W1210-W1211 or the equivalent. A continuation of the study of the language of contemporary writing. No P/D/F or R credit is allowed for this class.
Course Number
MDES2202W001Format
In-PersonPoints
5 ptsSpring 2025
Times/Location
Mo 10:10-11:15Tu 10:10-11:15We 10:10-11:15Th 10:10-11:15Section/Call Number
001/13005Enrollment
6 of 12Instructor
Rym BettaiebPrerequisites: MDES W1210-W1211 or the equivalent. A continuation of the study of the language of contemporary writing. No P/D/F or R credit is allowed for this class.
Course Number
MDES2202W002Format
In-PersonPoints
5 ptsSpring 2025
Times/Location
Mo 08:50-09:55Tu 08:50-09:55We 08:50-09:55Th 08:50-09:55Section/Call Number
002/13008Enrollment
7 of 12Instructor
Nasr AbdoCourse Number
MDES2209W001Format
In-PersonPoints
5 ptsSpring 2025
Times/Location
Mo 10:10-11:15Tu 10:10-11:15We 10:10-11:15Th 10:10-11:15Section/Call Number
001/13007Enrollment
15 of 15Instructor
Youssef NouhiCourse Number
MDES2302W001Format
In-PersonPoints
4 ptsSpring 2025
Times/Location
Tu 16:10-18:00Th 16:10-18:00Section/Call Number
001/11284Enrollment
2 of 10Instructor
Charry KaramanoukianCourse Number
MDES2402W001Format
In-PersonPoints
4 ptsSpring 2025
Times/Location
Th 10:10-12:00Tu 10:10-12:00Section/Call Number
001/11322Enrollment
9 of 20Instructor
Jay RameshPrerequisites: Second Year Hebrew: Intermediate I or instructor permission. Equal emphasis is given to all language skills. Irregular categories of the Hebrew verb, prepositions and syntax are taught systematically. Vocabulary building. Daily homework includes grammar exercises, short answers, reading, or writing short compositions. Frequent vocabulary and grammar quizzes. (Students completing this course fulfill Columbia College and Barnard language requirement.) No P/D/F or R credit is allowed for this class.
Course Number
MDES2502W001Format
In-PersonPoints
5 ptsSpring 2025
Times/Location
Mo 11:40-12:45Tu 11:40-12:45We 11:40-12:45Th 11:40-12:45Section/Call Number
001/11458Enrollment
5 of 12Instructor
Danielle Katz-ShenharCourse Number
MDES2518W001Format
In-PersonPoints
4 ptsSpring 2025
Times/Location
Mo 10:10-11:25We 10:10-11:25Th 10:10-11:25Section/Call Number
001/11459Enrollment
15 of 15Instructor
Danielle Katz-ShenharOne year of prior coursework in Elementary Hindi-Urdu I&II or the instructor’s permission. The course aims to continue consolidating and building upon the existing listening, speaking, reading, writing and cultural skills and will help students acquire higher level proficiency in Hindi language. Students will be introduced to new grammatical structures and a broad range of vocabulary through exposure to a variety of authentic materials including Hindi literature, newspapers, folk tales, films, songs, and other kinds of written and audio-visual materials and through these materials. Students will expand their knowledge base of the society and culture of the target languages in this course. No P/D/F or R credit is allowed for this class.
Course Number
MDES2602W001Format
In-PersonPoints
5 ptsSpring 2025
Times/Location
Mo 13:10-14:15Tu 13:10-14:15We 13:10-14:15Th 13:10-14:15Section/Call Number
001/13305Enrollment
7 of 15Instructor
Rakesh RanjanGandhi is in two senses an extraordinary figure: he was the most important leader of anti-imperialist movements in the twentieth century; yet, his ideas about modernity, the state, the industrial economy, technology, humanity’s place in nature, the presence of God - were all highly idiosyncratic, sometimes at odds with the main trends of modern civilization. How did a man with such views come to have such an immense effect on history? In some ways, Gandhi is an excellent entry into the complex history of modern India - its contradictions, achievements, failures, possibilities. This course will be primarily a course on social theory, focusing on texts and discursive exchanges between various perceptions of modernity in India. It will have two parts: the first part will be based on reading Gandhi’s own writings; the second, on the writings of his main interlocutors. It is hoped that through these exchanges students will get a vivid picture of the intellectual ferment in modern India, and the main lines of social and political thought that define its intellectual culture. The study in this course can be followed up by taking related courses in Indian political thought, or Indian politics or modern history. This course may not be taken as Pass/D/Fail.
Course Number
MDES2650W001Format
In-PersonPoints
4 ptsSpring 2025
Times/Location
Tu 13:10-14:25Th 13:10-14:25Section/Call Number
001/11696Enrollment
60 of 60Instructor
Sourav ChatterjeeCourse Number
MDES2651W001Format
In-PersonPoints
0 ptsSpring 2025
Times/Location
We 10:10-11:00Section/Call Number
001/15507Enrollment
3 of 15Instructor
Sourav ChatterjeeCourse Number
MDES2651W002Format
In-PersonPoints
0 ptsSpring 2025
Times/Location
We 11:10-12:00Section/Call Number
002/15528Enrollment
0 of 15Instructor
Sourav ChatterjeeCourse Number
MDES2651W003Format
In-PersonPoints
0 ptsSpring 2025
Times/Location
We 17:10-18:00Section/Call Number
003/15538Enrollment
9 of 15Instructor
Sourav ChatterjeeCourse Number
MDES2651W004Format
In-PersonPoints
0 ptsSpring 2025
Times/Location
We 18:10-19:00Section/Call Number
004/15559Enrollment
1 of 15Instructor
Sourav ChatterjeeCourse Number
MDES2702W001Format
In-PersonPoints
4 ptsSpring 2025
Times/Location
Mo 10:10-12:00We 10:10-12:00Section/Call Number
001/13381Enrollment
7 of 15Instructor
Saeed HonarmandCourse Number
MDES2902W001Format
In-PersonPoints
4 ptsSpring 2025
Times/Location
Mo 12:10-14:00We 12:10-14:00Section/Call Number
001/11202Enrollment
4 of 15Instructor
Zuleyha ColakSign up for section in the department.
Course Number
MDES3002W001Format
In-PersonPoints
3 ptsSpring 2025
Section/Call Number
001/18850Enrollment
1 of 5Instructor
Saeed HonarmandCourse Number
MDES3042W001Format
In-PersonPoints
4 ptsSpring 2025
Times/Location
Tu 14:40-15:55Th 14:40-15:55Section/Call Number
001/11302Enrollment
49 of 60Instructor
Joseph MassadCourse Number
MDES3043W001Format
In-PersonPoints
0 ptsSpring 2025
Times/Location
We 10:10-11:00Section/Call Number
001/15439Enrollment
2 of 15Instructor
Joseph MassadCourse Number
MDES3043W002Format
In-PersonPoints
0 ptsSpring 2025
Times/Location
We 11:10-12:00Section/Call Number
002/15451Enrollment
3 of 15Instructor
Joseph MassadCourse Number
MDES3043W003Format
In-PersonPoints
0 ptsSpring 2025
Times/Location
We 17:10-18:00Section/Call Number
003/15459Enrollment
9 of 15Instructor
Joseph MassadCourse Number
MDES3043W004Format
In-PersonPoints
0 ptsSpring 2025
Times/Location
We 18:10-19:00Section/Call Number
004/15466Enrollment
2 of 15Instructor
Joseph MassadCourse Number
MDES3260W001Format
In-PersonPoints
4 ptsSpring 2025
Times/Location
Mo 10:10-11:25We 10:10-11:25Section/Call Number
001/11293Enrollment
132 of 120Instructor
Timothy MitchellCourse Number
MDES3261W001Format
In-PersonPoints
0 ptsSpring 2025
Times/Location
Th 10:10-11:00Section/Call Number
001/15338Enrollment
9 of 15Instructor
Timothy MitchellCourse Number
MDES3261W002Format
In-PersonPoints
0 ptsSpring 2025
Times/Location
Th 11:10-12:00Section/Call Number
002/15348Enrollment
4 of 15Instructor
Timothy MitchellCourse Number
MDES3261W003Format
In-PersonPoints
0 ptsSpring 2025
Times/Location
We 18:10-19:00Section/Call Number
003/15363Enrollment
8 of 15Instructor
Timothy MitchellCourse Number
MDES3261W004Format
In-PersonPoints
0 ptsSpring 2025
Times/Location
We 19:10-20:00Section/Call Number
004/15376Enrollment
0 of 15Instructor
Timothy MitchellCourse Number
MDES3261W005Format
In-PersonPoints
0 ptsSpring 2025
Times/Location
Th 12:10-13:00Section/Call Number
005/15395Enrollment
10 of 15Instructor
Timothy MitchellCourse Number
MDES3261W006Format
In-PersonPoints
0 ptsSpring 2025
Times/Location
Th 13:10-14:00Section/Call Number
006/15419Enrollment
8 of 15Instructor
Timothy MitchellThis course explores how civil war, revolution, militarization, mass violence, refugee crises, and terrorism impact urban spaces, and how city dwellers engage in urban resilience, negotiate and attempt to reclaim their right to the city. Through case studies of Beirut (1975-present), Baghdad (2003-present), Cairo (2011-present), Diyarbakir (1914-present), Aleppo (1914-present), and Jerusalem (1914-present), this course traces how urban life adjusted to destruction (and post-conflict reconstruction), violence, and anarchy; how neighborhoods were reshaped; and how local ethnic, religious, and political dynamics played out in these cities and metropolises. Relying on multi-disciplinary and post-disciplinary scholarship, and employing a wealth of audiovisual material, literary works, and interviews conducted by the instructor, the course scrutinizes how conflicts have impacted urban life in the Middle East, and how civilians react to, confront, and resist militarization in urban spaces.
Course Number
MDES3331W001Format
In-PersonPoints
3 ptsSpring 2025
Times/Location
Mo 16:10-18:00Section/Call Number
001/11474Enrollment
40 of 40Instructor
Khatchig MouradianThis class offers a survey of major works of twentieth-century South Asian literature. We will read
Raja Rao, Rokeya Hossain, Ismat Chughtai, Viswanadha Satyanarayana, Amrita Pritam, and
Romesh Gunesekera. Emphasis will be placed on studying the thematic, formal, and stylistic
elements of works and developing critical skills necessary for literary analysis. Works will engage
with questions of nation & nationalism, gender & sexuality, caste, environment, and literary history.
Course Number
MDES3632W001Format
In-PersonPoints
3 ptsSpring 2025
Times/Location
Th 10:10-12:00Section/Call Number
001/11697Enrollment
25 of 25Instructor
Sourav ChatterjeeCourse Number
MDES3915W001Format
In-PersonPoints
3 ptsSpring 2025
Times/Location
Mo 11:40-12:55We 11:40-12:55Section/Call Number
001/17796Enrollment
2 of 30Instructor
Mamadou DioufThis course studies and explores a number of Iraqi narratives that have appeared since 2003 and that have a distinctive stylistic and thematic richness with great bearing on social, economic, cultural, and political life in Iraq. Seen against a history of the country and the region, and in conversation with some Afro-Asian and Latin American narratives of war and displacement, these writings assume global significance in our reading of such thematic issues like war, love, exile, and loss. While always using the past as a background, a source and repository of recollections, the challenge of the 2003 Anglo-America invasion and its institutionalization of segregation and rupture to keep Iraq in perpetual chaos, is present in the texts. Every narrative sheds light on a number of issues, especially war, horror, loss, trauma, passion and dislocation. This richness in detail is brought up through a number of stylistic innovations that put this writing at the forefront of world cultures and human concerns. An introductory lecture builds up a genealogy for trauma since the Epic of Gilgamesh (2700 BC.) and the lamentations of Astarte.
Course Number
MDES3930W001Format
In-PersonPoints
3 ptsSpring 2025
Times/Location
We 14:10-16:00Section/Call Number
001/11380Enrollment
25 of 22Instructor
Muhsin Al-MusawiThe MESAAS honors seminar offers the opportunity to undertake a sustained research project working closely with an individual faculty adviser. It also enables you, as part of a small group of MESAAS students working with the seminar instructor, to develop the skills of academic research and writing and learn how to collaborate with peers and create an engaged intellectual community. This 3-point seminar continues the work begun in the Fall semester of the senior year in MDES 3960 Honors Thesis Seminar Part 1.
Course Number
MDES3961W001Format
In-PersonPoints
3 ptsSpring 2025
Times/Location
Mo 12:10-14:00Section/Call Number
001/11252Enrollment
6 of 20Instructor
Hamid DabashiThe main task of this course will be to read novels by African writers. But the novel in Africa also involves connections between the literary genre of the novel and the historical processes of colonialism, decolonization, and globalization in Africa. One important question we'll consider is how African novels depict those historical experiences in their themes and plots—we'll read novels that are about colonialism, etc. A more complex question is how these historical processes relate to the emergence of the novel as an important genre for African writers. Edward Said went so far as to say that without imperialism, there would be no European novel as we know it. How can we understand the novel in Africa (whether read or written) as a product of the colonial encounter? How did it shape the process of decolonization? What contribution to history, whether literary or political, does the novel in Africa make? We'll undertake a historical survey of African novels from the 1930s to the present, with attention to various subgenres (village novel, war novel, urbanization novel, novel of postcolonial disillusion, Bildungsroman). We'll attend to how African novelists blend literate and oral storytelling traditions, how they address their work to local and global audiences, and how they use scenes of characters reading novels (whether African or European) in order to position their writing within national, continental, and world literary space.
Course Number
MDES4122W001Format
In-PersonPoints
4 ptsSpring 2025
Times/Location
Mo 14:10-16:00Section/Call Number
001/17785Enrollment
5 of 20Instructor
Jennifer WenzelCourse Number
MDES4211W001Format
In-PersonPoints
5 ptsSpring 2025
Times/Location
Mo 08:50-09:55Tu 08:50-09:55We 08:50-09:55Th 08:50-09:55Section/Call Number
001/13014Enrollment
12 of 12Instructor
Youssef NouhiPrerequisites: MDES W4212. Through reading articles and essays by Arab thinkers and intellectuals of the Twentieth century, starting from the period called Nahda (Renaissance), such as Taha Hussein, Qasim Amin, Abdallah Laroui, Abed Al-Jabiri, Tahar Haddad, Fatima Mernissi and others, students will be able to increase their fluency and accuracy in Arabic while working on reading text and being exposed to the main
themes in Arab thought. The course works with all four skills (listening, speaking, reading and writing). Arabic is the language of instruction. No P/D/F or R credit is allowed for this class.
Course Number
MDES4213W001Format
In-PersonPoints
4 ptsSpring 2025
Times/Location
Mo 10:10-12:00We 10:10-12:00Section/Call Number
001/13016Enrollment
3 of 10Instructor
Taoufik Ben-AmorThrough reading and writing, students will review Arabic Grammar concepts within the context of linguistic functions such as narration, description, comparison, etc. For example, within the function of narration, students will focus on verb tenses, word order, and adverbials. Based on error analysis in the past twelve years that the Arabic Program has been using Al-Kitaab, emphasis will be placed on common and frequent grammatical errors. Within these linguistic functions and based on error analysis, the course will review the following main concepts: Types of sentence and sentence/clause structure. The Verb system, pattern meanings and verb complementation. Quadriliteral verb patterns and derivations. Weak Verbs derivations, conjugation, tense frames and negation. Case endings. Types of noun and participle: Noun of time, place, instance, stance, instrument, active and passive participles. Types of construct phrase: al-iDafa. Types of Adverbials and verb complements: Hal, Tamyiz, Maf’ul mutlaq, Maf’ul li’ajlihi, adverbs of time, frequency, place and manner. The number system and countable nouns. Types of maa.Diptotes, al-mamnu’ min-aSSarf. No P/D/F or R credit is allowed for this class.
Course Number
MDES4216W001Format
In-PersonPoints
3 ptsSpring 2025
Times/Location
Mo 13:10-14:25We 13:10-14:25Section/Call Number
001/13018Enrollment
5 of 12Instructor
Taoufik Ben-AmorPrerequisites: MDES UN2202 This is an introductory course to Levantine Arabic for students who have completed two years of Standard Arabic studies, at the Intermediate level. The course is designed to further develop fluency in oral communication, through building students’ familiarity with a less formal register of Arabic, namely the Levantine dialect. The course will convert and recycle some of the previous Standard Arabic knowledge to the dialect, by comparing their prior knowledge to its dialectal counterpart; while at the same time developing students’ new communicative skills in a diverse range of contexts that are essential in any conversational interaction. The course will build students abilities to interact effectively in various areas where Levantine Arabic is spoken. In addition to varied thematic topics, the course exposes students to cultural aspects specific to the region. Additionally, the course will work on both constructing students’ knowledge of dialectal diction as well as other grammatical features of the dialects. Even though the course is designed for communication in the four skills (reading, writing, listening and speaking), the emphasis will be mostly on speaking and listening. No P/D/F or R credit is allowed for this class.
Course Number
MDES4219W001Format
In-PersonPoints
4 ptsSpring 2025
Times/Location
Tu 14:10-16:00Th 14:10-16:00Section/Call Number
001/13017Enrollment
8 of 15Instructor
Reem FarajThe purpose of the Arabic Linguistic Tradition course is to introduce undergraduate and graduate
students to the Arabic Linguistic Tradition, starting before Islam and ending in current times. The
course maps out the context in which the Arabic language and its predecessors existed, the
history of the development of the language, its script, its geographical spread, its linguistic
influences on other languages and scripts throughout the world, as well as its own influences by
other languages. The course will also examine the importance of Arabic as a language of
religion, philosophy, sciences, and nationalism. Furthermore, the course will focus on the
classical Arabic linguistic categories and fields devised by Arab/Arabic grammarians, and how
we can situate them vis-à-vis modern western linguistic theories. The course will detail some of
the language linguistic issues, challenges and secrets, as the language stands on its own, as well
as within a euro-centric “modern” linguistic theories framework.
Course Number
MDES4220W001Format
In-PersonPoints
4 ptsSpring 2025
Times/Location
Th 12:10-14:00Section/Call Number
001/18876Enrollment
2 of 20Instructor
May AhmarThis course works along a number of axial structures that aim to let texts voice their informing theoretical, political, and poetic strategies. It draws on war narratives in other parts of the world, especially Vietnam, insofar as these find their way into Arabic writing. A poetics of prose gives these narratives the power of literary production that makes them more readable, appealing, and provocative than ordinary journalistic reporting.
Through close readings of a number of Arabic war novels and some long narrative poems, this course proposes to address war in its varieties not only as liberation movements in Algeria and Palestine, but also as an engagement with invasions, as in Iraqi narratives of war, or as conflict as was the case between Iran and Iraq, 1980-1988, as proxy wars in other parts of the region , or ‘civil’ wars generated and perpetuated by big powers. Although writers are no longer the leaders of thought as in the first half of the 20th century, they resume different roles of exposition, documentation, reinstatement of identities, and geographical and topographical orientation. Narrators and protagonists are not spectators but implicated individuals whose voices give vent to dreams, desires, intimations, and expectations. They are not utterly passive, however. Behind bewilderment and turbulence, there is a will to expose atrocity and brutality. Writing is an effort to regain humanity in an inhuman situation.
The course is planned under thematic and theoretical divisions: one that takes writing as a deliberate exposure of the censored and repressed; another as a counter shock and awe strategy [ implemented under this name in the wars on Iraq] whereby brutalities are laid bare; and a third that claims reporting in order to explore its limits and complicity. On the geographical level, it takes Algeria, Palestine as locations for liberation movements; Iraq as a site of death; Egypt as the space for statist duplicity and camouflage; and Lebanon as an initial stage for a deliberate exercise in a seemingly civil war.
A number of films will be shown as part of students’ presentations.
Course Number
MDES4259W001Format
In-PersonPoints
4 ptsSpring 2025
Times/Location
Tu 14:10-16:00Section/Call Number
001/11375Enrollment
28 of 25Instructor
Muhsin Al-MusawiCourse Number
MDES4260W001Format
In-PersonPoints
4 ptsSpring 2025
Times/Location
Mo 10:10-11:25We 10:10-11:25Section/Call Number
001/17935Enrollment
3 of 4Instructor
Timothy MitchellCourse Number
MDES4501W001Format
In-PersonPoints
4 ptsSpring 2025
Times/Location
Mo 12:10-14:00We 12:10-14:00Section/Call Number
001/11460Enrollment
8 of 12Instructor
Naama HarelCourse Number
MDES4511W001Format
In-PersonPoints
4 ptsSpring 2025
Times/Location
Mo 14:10-16:00We 14:10-16:00Section/Call Number
001/11462Enrollment
16 of 15Instructor
Danielle Katz-Shenhar“The possibility of pogroms,” claims Theodor Adorno, “is decided in the moment when the gaze of a fatally-wounded animal falls on a human being. The defiance with which he repels this gaze—’after all it's only an animal’—reappears irresistibly in cruelties done to human beings.” This course traces the development of Modern Hebrew literature, from its fin-de-siècle revival to contemporary Israeli fiction, through the prism of animality and animalization. We will focus on human-animal relations and animalization/dehumanization of humans in literary works by prominent Hebrew authors, including M.Y. Berdichevsky, Devorah Baron, S.Y. Agnon, Amos Oz, David Grossman, Orly Castel-Bloom, Almog Behar, Etgar Keret, and Sayed Kashua. Employing posthumanist and ecofeminist theoretical lenses, we will analyze the bio-political intersections of species and gender, as well as animalization as a process of otherization of marginalized ethnic groups. Throughout the course, we will ask questions, such as: why animals abound in Modern Hebrew literature? Are they merely metaphors for intra-human issues, or rather count as subjects? What literary devices are used to portray animals? How has the depiction of human-animal relations changed in Hebrew over the last 150 years? How do cultural and political frameworks inform representations of human-animal relations? No prior knowledge of Hebrew is required; all readings and class discussions will be in English. Course participants with reading knowledge of Hebrew are encouraged to consult the original literary texts, provided by the instructor upon request.
Course Number
MDES4532W001Format
In-PersonPoints
4 ptsSpring 2025
Times/Location
We 14:10-16:00Section/Call Number
001/11461Enrollment
8 of 20Instructor
Naama HarelCourse Number
MDES4601G001Format
In-PersonPoints
4 ptsSpring 2025
Times/Location
Th 14:10-16:00Section/Call Number
001/11361Enrollment
22 of 25Instructor
Sudipta KavirajCourse Number
MDES4625W001Format
In-PersonPoints
5 ptsSpring 2025
Times/Location
Th 10:10-12:00Tu 10:10-12:00Section/Call Number
001/13297Enrollment
7 of 15Instructor
Rakesh RanjanTwo semesters of prior coursework in Urdu for Heritage Speakers (Urdu for Heritage Speakers I and II) or one semester of Advanced Urdu or the instructor’s permission. This course is a literary course, with in-depth exposure to some of the finest works of classical and modern Urdu poetry i.e. genres of ghazal and nazm. This course is open for both undergraduates and graduates. No P/D/F or R credit is allowed for this class.
Course Number
MDES4636W001Format
In-PersonPoints
4 ptsSpring 2025
Times/Location
Tu 18:10-20:00Th 18:10-20:00Section/Call Number
001/13296Enrollment
10 of 15Instructor
Aftab AhmadCourse Number
MDES4637W001Format
In-PersonPoints
4 ptsSpring 2025
Times/Location
We 16:10-18:00Section/Call Number
001/11405Enrollment
22 of 20Instructor
Debashree MukherjeeCourse Number
MDES4711W001Format
In-PersonPoints
3 ptsSpring 2025
Times/Location
Mo 12:10-14:00We 12:10-14:00Section/Call Number
001/13382Enrollment
5 of 15Instructor
Saeed HonarmandCourse Number
MDES4927W001Format
In-PersonPoints
3 ptsSpring 2025
Times/Location
Tu 14:40-15:55Th 14:40-15:55Section/Call Number
001/11203Enrollment
4 of 15Instructor
Dilek OztoprakThis course will examine the experience of Ottoman American communities before, during, and after their migration to the United States, with a particular focus on Ottoman Armenians pre- and post-genocide. Through close readings of the scholarship on Ottoman Armenian, Turkish, Jewish, Arab, and Greek immigration, we will ask: what global forces compelled Ottoman journeys to America (e.g. economic opportunity, Christian imperialism, state-sponsored violence, interethnic strife)? And what ideologies informed the way these migrants were received in a new country (e.g. nativism, nationalism, Orientalism, philhellenism)? In answering these questions and raising new ones, we will also aim to understand how Ottoman American immigration stories both fit into and challenge the existing scholarship on “American immigration” as well as race, whiteness, and citizenship studies. Throughout the course, we will pay special attention to the experience of Ottoman American immigrants in New York City through field trips, museums, and other primary and secondary source materials.
Course Number
MDES4952W001Format
In-PersonPoints
4 ptsSpring 2025
Times/Location
Tu 10:10-12:00Section/Call Number
001/19028Enrollment
0 of 20Instructor
Nora LessersohnCourse Number
MDES5000G001Format
In-PersonPoints
4 ptsSpring 2025
Times/Location
Mo 16:10-18:00Section/Call Number
001/11291Enrollment
21 of 25Instructor
Timothy MitchellCourse Number
MDES6008G001Format
In-PersonPoints
2 ptsSpring 2025
Times/Location
Th 16:10-18:00Section/Call Number
001/11371Enrollment
4 of 25Instructor
Mana KiaThis seminar aims to introduce graduate students to the major subfields making up the Sharīʿa system, both in its theoretical as well as practical and institutional manifestations. We will be dissecting representative texts from each genre, all in the Arabic original, ranging from works on the psychoepistemic foundations of the law, to legal theory, the judiciary and juridico-political practice, legal education, biographical constructions of authority, and economic and political management by the Sharīʿa. Theoretically, we will be drawing on historical and cultural anthropology, political theory, Critical Theory, the theories of the subject, and constitutional studies, among others. A reasonable success in this course will permit the student to comfortably specialize in any Sharīʿa subfield.
Course Number
MDES6237G001Format
In-PersonPoints
4 ptsSpring 2025
Times/Location
We 16:10-18:00Section/Call Number
001/11372Enrollment
10 of 20Instructor
Wael HallaqThis course will seek to analyze some philosophical and interpretative problems raised by recent works in a field generally described as 'postcolonial theory'. At the center of the discussion would be the themes of Eurocentrism and Orientalism. While the questions associated with this field are highly significant, there is much that is indeterminate about this area of social theory. The course will start with an historical analysis of the original debates about 'Orientalism' and the nature of its arguments. It will start with a preliminary reading of Said’s Orientalism. It will then take up for a direct critical examination textual traditions that were the objects of the Orientalism debate – representative examples of European Orientalist literature – which claimed to produce, for the first time, 'scientific' studies of Oriental societies (work of linguists like William Jones, or historians like James Mill), studies of Middle Eastern Islamic societies analyzed by Said, segments of philosophies of history which dealt with non-European societies and found a place for them in a scheme of 'universal history' ( Hegel, Marx, Mill, Weber). We shall then turn to ask if social science knowledge about non-European societies still carry the methodological features of Orientalism. As Orientalism spread across different fields of modern culture – not just academic knowledge, but also art and aesthetic representations, the next two weeks fictional and visual representations will be taken up for critical analysis. This will be followed by a study of texts in which intellectuals from non-European societies from Asia and Africa responded to the cognitive and cultural claims of the European Orientalist literature. In the last section the course will focus on three aspects of the postcolonial critique:
- the question of representation ,
- the question of the writing of history, and
- the logic of basic concepts in social sciences.
Course Number
MDES6600G001Format
In-PersonPoints
4 ptsSpring 2025
Times/Location
We 14:10-16:00Section/Call Number
001/11364Enrollment
28 of 28Instructor
Sudipta KavirajPrerequisites: the instructors permission.
Course Number
MDES8001G001Format
In-PersonPoints
3 ptsSpring 2025
Section/Call Number
001/18851Enrollment
0 of 5Instructor
Saeed HonarmandCourse Number
MDES8008G001Format
In-PersonPoints
0 ptsSpring 2025
Times/Location
Th 16:10-18:00Section/Call Number
001/11413Enrollment
1 of 25Instructor
Gil HochbergCourse Number
MDES8206G001Format
In-PersonPoints
4 ptsSpring 2025
Times/Location
Tu 16:10-18:00Section/Call Number
001/11301Enrollment
18 of 20Instructor
Joseph MassadCourse Number
SWHL1102W001Format
In-PersonPoints
4 ptsSpring 2025
Times/Location
Mo 09:10-10:00Tu 09:10-10:00We 09:10-10:00Th 09:10-10:00Section/Call Number
001/11207Enrollment
18 of 25Instructor
Abdul NanjiCourse Number
SWHL2102W001Format
In-PersonPoints
4 ptsSpring 2025
Times/Location
Mo 10:10-11:00Tu 10:10-11:00We 10:10-11:00Th 10:10-11:00Section/Call Number
001/11208Enrollment
6 of 15Instructor
Abdul NanjiPrerequisites: Advanced Swahili I or the instructor's permission. An introduction to the advanced syntactical, morphological, and grammatical structures of Swahili grammar; detailed analysis of Swahili texts; practice in conversation. No P/D/F or R credit is allowed for this class.