Teaching
As a historian of the Modern Middle East and North Africa, at ѻý I teach a wide array of topics. My courses range from the introductory surveys of The Making of the Modern Middle East and Re-Making of the Twentieth-Century Middle East to special topics courses such as Colonial Encounters in North Africa and The Algerian Revolution. In my classes, I encourage students to critically examine material for the presuppositions, theory, political viewpoint, values and personal prejudices that affected and informed it. I strongly believe that a real long-lasting reward is to be found in such an approach to studying. I also hope that a greater understanding of the history of the Middle East and Islam will enable students to make better sense of what is going on in the Middle East today.
Research
My research agenda derives from a critical concern in Islamic Studies: What is the meaning of Islamic modernity? What is the concrete historical content of the changes that occurred during the modern period in the Muslim world? What is the relationship between tradition and modernity? How do Muslims view modernity? Specifically, my investigation focuses on the ideologies of Islamic revival and reform in nineteenth and twentieth centuries Morocco.
My first book, inquires into the composition, function, and meaning of Islamic tradition, and by extension into the larger question of the relationship between tradition and historical change. The book focuses on a project of Islamic reform initiated by al-Mahdi al-Wazzani (1849-1923), a prominent nineteenth century Moroccan religious scholar.
Expanding my research into the colonial period, my next book will be an intellectual biography of a twentieth century Moroccan reformist scholar, Muhammad al-Hajwi (1874-1956).
In my spare time
I enjoy traveling the world. Naturally, I have traveled extensively in the Middle East, trekking in Jordan and Morocco, spending summer breaks in Cairo and Istanbul and diving in Sinai. I enjoy camping, hiking, and working out.
SELECTED PUBLICATIONS
Books
(Stanford University Press, 2014)
Special Issue:
Women in the Maghrib, French Politics, Culture & Society 39:1 (2021).
Articles and Book Chapters
"Muhammad al-Hajwi (1874-1956). Créer la femme marocaine moderne.” In Savants musulmans au Maghreb. Eds. Sabrina Mervin and Augustin Jomier, 84-103. Marseille, France: Diacritiques Éditions, 2023
“Muslim Men, European Hats: A ٷ on Cultural Appropriation in a Global Age.” Journal of North African Studies 26:6 (2021), 1-26.
“Women’s lives in Colonial and Postcolonial Maghrib.” French Politics, Culture & Society 39:1 (2021), 1-8.
“Educating Women, Recasting Patriarchy: Becoming Modern in Colonial Morocco.” French Politics, Culture & Society 39:1 (2021), 83-107.
“Navigating Modernity: Lessons in Government and Statecraft in Precolonial Morocco,” Mediterranean Studies 25:1 (2017), 76-97.
“Consuming Anxieties: Mobility of Commodities across Religious Boundaries in Nineteenth-Century Morocco,” Journal of the Economic and Social History of the Orient 60:1 (2017), 115-41.
“Redefining Islamic Tradition: Legal Interpretation as a Medium for Innovation in the Making of Modern Morocco.” Islamic Law and Society 20:4 (2013), 404-454.
“Al-Mahdi al-Wazzani.” In Islamic Legal Thought: A Compendium of Muslim Jurists. Eds. David Powers, Susan Spectorsky, Oussama Arabi. Leiden: Brill, 2013, 435-455.
Co-author with David S. Powers "From the Mi′yar of al-Wansharisi to the New Mi′yar of al-Wazzani: Continuity and Change," Jerusalem Studies in Arabic and Islam, 33 (2007), 235-260
Book Reviews
David Stenner. Globalizing Morocco: Transnational Activism and the Postcolonial State (Stanford, Calif.: Stanford University Press, 2019), American Historical Review, 125:4 (October 2020), 1572-1573.
Henri Lauzière. The Making of Salafism: Islamic Reform in the Twentieth Century (New York: Columbia University Press, 2016), American Historical Review, 122:1 (February 2017), 283.
Ellen J. Amster, Medicine and the Saints: Science, Islam, and the Colonial Encounter in Morocco, 1877-1956 (Austin: University of Texas, 2013), Journal Interdisciplinary History, 45:3 (2015), 453-4.