Dyala HAMZAH
Dyala Hamzah
- Professeure agrégée
-
Faculté des arts et des sciences - Département d'histoire
Pavillon Lionel-Groulx office C6110
Web : Page professionnelle (faculté,département,école)
Web : LinkedIn
Web : Compte Twitter
Web : Autre site web
Web : Autre site web
Affiliations
- Membre – CCÉAE — Centre canadien d'études allemandes et européennes
- Membre – CÉRIUM — Centre d'études et de recherches internationales
Education Programs
- Literature and Languages
- Literature and Languages
- Literature and Languages Humanities Social Sciences Arts and Music
- Social Sciences Arts and Music Literature and Languages Humanities
- Literature and Languages Humanities
- Humanities
- Humanities
- Humanities
- Social Sciences Humanities
- Economics and Politics Humanities Social Sciences
- Teaching and Education Sciences Humanities
Courses
- HST1070 Introduction aux mondes de l'islam
- HST6648 La Renaissance arabe, espace public fin-de-siècle
Areas of Expertise
- Ottoman Empire
- Public space
- Social movements
- Nationalism
- Public Opinion
- Pan-Arabism
- Pan-Islamism
- Religion
- Arab renaissance
- Arab world
- Colonialism
- 18th century
- 19th century
- 20th century
- Modern Times
- Middle East
My research interests concern the processes of reform and centralization in the Arab provinces of the Ottoman Empire throughout the 19th century (Egypt, Syria, Iraq, North Africa), from a cultural and social perspective. The central role of the press and associations in the emergence of a public space during the Arab Renaissance and the issues of education and citizenship in the colonial and post-colonial periods are central to my research.
At the same time, my work bears on the symmetrical processes of professionalization and the popularization of Islamic expertise in the 20th century. More specifically, I am interested in the institutional and curricular development of mosque-universities such as al-Azhar, Zaytuna and Qarawiyyin, from the 18th century until their nationalization in the 1960s, and also in the legacies and uses of Islamic historiography, philosophy and law in the contemporary period, particularly in nationalism and Islamism.
My current research aims to contribute to the cultural history of Arab nationalism and to define its key institutions: volunteer associations and secret societies; scouting movements; school textbooks.
Student supervision Expand all Collapse all
Publications Expand all Collapse all
Publications principales
- Dyala Hamzah (dir.), 2012, The Making of the Arab Intellectual (1880-1960) : Empire, Public Sphere and the Colonial Coordinates of Selfhood (Londres, Routledge).
- Dyala Hamzah, 2012, « Humanities with an Agenda : Snapshots from the MENA Region », in Jürgen Mittelstrass et Ulrich Ruediger (dir.), Die Zukunft der Geisteswissenschaften in einer multipolaren Welt, Constance : Universitätsverlag, pp. 61-72.
- Dyala Hamzah, 2008, « Lutte nationale ou fondation étatique ? Les intellectuels palestiniens d’Oslo I à Intifada II ». Revue des Mondes Musulmans et de la Méditerranée n°123 : 161-177.
- Dyala Hamzah, 2007, « Nineteenth-Century Egypt as Dynastic Locus of Universality : The History of Muhammad Ali by Khalil ibn Ahmad al-Rajabi (d. 1829) », Comparative Studies of South Asia, Africa and the Middle East 27.1 (2007) : 62-82.
- Dyala Hamzah, 2005, « Is There An Arab Public Sphere ? The Palestinian Intifada, a Saudi Fatwa and the Egyptian Press », in Armando Salvatore & Mark LeVine (dir.), Religion, Social Practice, and Contested Hegemonies : Reconstructing the Public Sphere in Muslim Majority Societies, New York : Palgrave MacMillan : 181-206.
Additional Information
Media
Browse this profile on: