Upcoming events
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Tue29Apr202516-18 PMAuditorium 1 Jan Broeckx, Faculty of Arts & Philosophy, Blandijnberg 2 9000 Gent
Quest for Love in Central Morocco - Young Women and the Dynamics of Intimate Lives - Laura Menin
Book presentationShow contentLaura Menin’s ethnography focuses on young women living in the low-income and lower-middle-class neighborhoods of a midsized town in Central Morocco, far from the overt influence of city life. At the heart of the book, Menin draws upon ideas of “love” as an ethnographic object and source of theoretical examination.
She demonstrates that love, as a complex cultural and historical phenomenon shaped through intersecting socioeconomic and political developments, is crucial in thinking through generational changes and debates in Morocco and the Middle East more broadly. What is at stake in the quest for love, she argues, is not only the making of gendered selves and intimate relationships, but also the imagination of social and political life. Read more
About the speaker
Laura Menin is a research associate in the School of Global Studies at the University of Sussex. She has published numerous articles in the Middle East Journal of Culture and Communication, Contemporary Levant, and the Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute.29 April 2025
16h00 - 18h00 (GMT +1)Join us in person
Auditorium 1 Jan Broeckx
Faculty of Arts
Blandijnberg 2
9000 Gent
DirectionsThis book presentation is part of the Middle East Studies Research Seminar Series
Organised by
Arabic, Islamic and Middle East Studies Middle East Studies at Ghent University
Co-organised by
CARAM - Centre for Anthropological Research on Affect and Materiality
CRCG - Centre for Research on Culture and Gender
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Wed30Apr202510:30 - 13:30Aud. Vandenhove Pavilion Charles Vandenhove (Campus Boekentoren) Rozier 1 9000 Gent
“Between revolution and capitulation: an ethnography of everyday queer worldmaking in the Chinese city Hangzhou” captures the everyday lives of queer people and their organizing practices in contemporary mainland China". By Haiyan Huang.
PhD defense -
Tue20May202512.14-13.30Faculteitszaal (first floor) Campus Boekentoren, Blandijn Blandijnberg 2 Ghent University
Hair, Identity, Beauty, and the Self in Muslim Contexts: Emotional Landscapes and Changing Femininities Beyond the Veil, by Lisa Franke
Lunch seminarShow contentLisa Franke presents her project proposal submitted to the ERC on how Muslim women’s hair shapes everyday intimate lifeworlds, processes of social transformation, and new religious identities in contemporary Egypt, Lebanon and the United Arab Emirates. By shifting the paradigm from the veil as a marker of inter alia religiosity, the project examines how the attitudes and practices of Muslim women towards their hair condition religious norms and social expectations.
Hair itself remains a neglected theme, despite being central to issues of identity, beauty and processes of individualisation. Even so, there is much contention concerning how Muslim women wear their hair, think and feel about it. Indeed, hair is at the very root of the global contemporary headscarf debate. Hair is both a mundane issue and a disputed one for many women. As such, it is a contentious field that spans the negotiation of gender dynamics, beauty ideals, political orientation, and religious norms.
About the speaker
Lisa Maria Franke is research assistant professor in Islamic Studies at Ghent University in the Department of Languages and Cultures. Her research and teaching focus on the social and intellectual history of Islam and being Muslim in the modern Middle East.Her research interests include everyday history, eschatology, faith and identity, discourse analysis and gender studies; individuality, religious transformation processes and social dynamics; modern Arabic literature; language as a form of mediation in various text forms. Read more
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