WiSe 22/23: Interdisciplinary and/or Inter-Institutional master's degree programs
M.A. Interdisciplinary Studies of the Middle East (2020 study regulations)
0593a_MA120Please find the current study and examination regulations here .
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Reading the Middle East
0593aA2.1Learning objectives:
Students understand the significance of global key concepts and central terms and how they relate to thinking about the Near and Middle East and ascriptions of identity. They are familiar with the scholarly significance of texts and debates that shape the discourse of Interdisciplinary Studies of the Middle East and learn how to classify them in historical terms as well as from today’s perspective, considering their origins and the changing contexts in which they are used. They have in-depth knowledge of texts that constitute the Near and Middle East from a transregional perspective. They are thereby enabled to classify transdisciplinary methodological and theoretical approaches, especially in comparative cultural studies, and to apply them to their research against the background of current research debates and present the results appropriately, both in writing and orally.Content:
The module discusses key texts, central concepts and fields of researching the Near and Middle East (e.g. Orientalism, world/global literatures, Islam in Europe, postcolonialism, nationalism) in their historical development and from a transregional and cross-disciplinary perspective. Besides, the module explores the historical and transdisciplinary dynamics of terms and concepts, how they circulate, and how their meaning transforms in changing contexts.Modes of instruction/ Contact hours / Regular attendance required
Elective course / 2 SWS / yesElective course / 2 SWS / yes
Module assessment
Presentation with follow-up discussion (approx. 20 minutes)Language
English (or if applicable, Arabic, Hebrew, Persian, Syriac-Aramaic,Turkish)Total workload
450 hours (15 credit points)duration / Frequency
One or two semesters / Every semester close-
14558
Wahlveranstaltung
Reading Amia Srinivasan's The Right to Sex (Victoria Mummelthei)
Schedule: Mo 14:00-16:00 (Class starts on: 2022-10-31)
Location: 2.2058 Seminarraum and asynchronously online
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14558
Wahlveranstaltung
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Reading the Middle East through Its Languages
0593aA2.2Learning objectives:
Students have a thorough understanding of basic questions about the relationship between text and knowledge; they can analyze the significance of original language texts within the context of the Near and Middle East as a pluricultural, multifaith, and multilingual region. They are confident to reflect on theories and models critically and build a conceptual toolkit to decipher the rhetoric of different texts and genres. Students have the skills they need to reach conclusions about the heuristics of different texts and genres on their own and by using controlled methods; they can present their findings orally and in writing appropriately.Content:
The module develops interdisciplinary terms and concepts from the fields of cultural studies and humanities by means of various forms of original language sources (oral and written) from Arabic, Persian, Syriac-Aramaic, Jewish, Islamic, or Christian culture and literature. Building on this, students examine and discuss methods of text and source analysis used to organize, contextualize, and interpret primary sources; they then apply those methods to selected examples (works by different authors and from different literary genres, periods, movements, etc.).Modes of instruction/ Contact hours / Regular attendance required
Elective course / 2 SWS / yesElective course / 2 SWS / yes
Module assessment
Presentation with follow-up discussion (approx. 20 minutes)Language
English (or if applicable, Arabic, Hebrew, Persian, Syriac-Aramaic,Turkish)Total workload
450 hours (15 credit points)duration / Frequency
One or two semesters / Every semester close-
13951
Reading Course
Reading Mesopotamian Divinatory Texts (Cale Johnson)
Schedule: Mi 12:00-14:00 (Class starts on: 2022-10-19)
Location: Arnimallee 10, Raum 010
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13955
Reading Course
Cancelled
Reading Late Babylonian astrology (Marvin Schreiber)
Schedule: Mi 10:00-12:00 (Class starts on: 2022-10-19)
Location: Kurs abgesagt!
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14309
Reading Course
(LK) Early Islam in Arabic Historiography (Stefan Maneval)
Schedule: Fr 14:00-16:00 (Class starts on: 2022-10-21)
Location: JK 25/132 (Habelschwerdter Allee 45)
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14355
Language Course
Arabic Medien, Culture and Traditions (Heba Tebakhi)
Schedule: Mo 12:00-14:00, Mi 12:00-14:00 (Class starts on: 2022-10-17)
Location: 1.2052 Seminarraum (Fabeckstr. 23/25)
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14431
Reading Course
(Lk) Arabc Linguistics and Dialektology (Shabo Talay)
Schedule: Do 16:00-18:00 (Class starts on: 2022-10-20)
Location: 1.2001 Seminarraum (Fabeckstr. 23/25)
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14521
Practice seminar
Cancelled
History of the Turkish language (Sebastian Cwiklinski)
Schedule: Di 10:00-12:00 (Class starts on: 2022-10-18)
Location: JK 25/138 (Habelschwerdter Allee 45)
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14523
Practice seminar
History of Capitalism in the Ottoman Empire (Toygun Altintas)
Schedule: Do 14:00-16:00 (Class starts on: 2022-10-20)
Location: 0.2002 Seminarraum (Fabeckstr. 23/25)
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14557
Wahlveranstaltung
Feminist and Queer Readings of Late Ottoman Empire and Modern Turkey (Ezgi Saritas)
Schedule: Di 12:00-16:00, zusätzliche Termine siehe LV-Details (Class starts on: 2022-10-18)
Location: 2.2051 Besprechungsraum (Fabeckstr. 23/25)
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14316
Practice seminar
(Ü) Ibn Khaldun, al-Muquaddima (Florian Zemmin)
Schedule: Mo 14:00-16:00 (Class starts on: 2022-10-17)
Location: 1.2052 Seminarraum (Fabeckstr. 23/25)
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14354
Language Course
Lovers, Gazelles, Mounts and Deserts - Classical Arabic Texts (Isabelle Felenda)
Schedule: Mo 10:00-12:00, Mi 10:00-12:00 (Class starts on: 2022-10-17)
Location: 1.2052 Seminarraum (Fabeckstr. 23/25)
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14356
Basic Course
Arabic Rhetoric and Poetics (Beatrice Gründler)
Schedule: Mi 16:00-18:00 (Class starts on: 2022-10-19)
Location: 1.2001 Seminarraum (Fabeckstr. 23/25)
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14358
Advanced Seminar
Literature & Journalism of Emile Habibi (1922-1996) (Refqa Abu-Remaileh)
Schedule: Fr 10:00-14:00 (Class starts on: 2022-11-18)
Location: keine Angabe
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14439
Methods Tutorial
(MÜ) Comparative Semitics (Grace Jeongyeon Park)
Schedule: Fr 14:00-16:00 (Class starts on: 2022-10-21)
Location: 1.2002 Seminarraum (Fabeckstr. 23/25)
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14440
Advanced Seminar
(VS) Northwest Semitic Inscriptions (Grace Jeongyeon Park)
Schedule: Mo 14:00-16:00 (Class starts on: 2022-10-17)
Location: JK 25/138 weitere Hinweise zur Austattun
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14641
Reading Course
(Lk1) Hebräische Sekundärliteratur (Vera Meyer-Laurin)
Schedule: Mo 18:00-20:00 (Class starts on: 2022-10-24)
Location: 0.2002 Seminarraum (Fabeckstr. 23/25)
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13951
Reading Course
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Studying the Middle East
0593aA1.1Learning objectives:
Students are aware of the complexity of the Near and Middle East as a field of research, region, and area of cultural production regarding its diversity in terms of languages, religions, and cultures. They gain insights into the fields of study and expertise represented by the disciplines involved in the master’s program Interdisciplinary Studies of the Middle East with attention to the complex nature of history, societies, cultures of text and cultures of knowledge, languages, and literature. They are familiar with the diversity and interrelatedness of scholarly approaches within Interdisciplinary Studies of the Middle East, which in turn allows them to assess the corresponding secondary literature critically. They are conscious of intercultural and epistemological challenges involved in dealing with the history, society, culture, literature, and language of the Near and Middle East. This awareness lets them answer complex questions and present the results of their research and analyses coherently and comprehensibly either in writing or orally.Content:
The module offers in-depth, interdisciplinary insights into the Near and Middle East as a field of research, as a region and as a space of cultural production. A variety of phenomena including language, cultural history, religion, and traditions of knowledge are up for discussion, especially regarding paradigms with historical implications, such as identity, gender, cultures of memory, nationalism, modernization, exile; this includes research trends as well as the possibility to focus on historical periods or geographical regions. Students get practice conducting academic work as they encounter varying issues, research debates, and research literature, as well as by using tools specific to the study of the Near and Middle East. Using methods from the humanities and cultural studies, they work on an interdisciplinary topic with a focus on one or more selected regions in the Near and Middle East. This work includes several written assignments designed to help them compose an academic paper.Modes of instruction/ Contact hours / Regular attendance required
Lecture / 2 SWS / yesMethodology course / 2 SWS / yes
Module assessment
Written assignment (approx. 5000 words); the module assessment is graded on a pass/fail basis only.Language
English (or if applicable, Arabic, Hebrew, Persian, Syriac-Aramaic,Turkish)Total workload
450 hours (15 credit points)duration / Frequency
One semester / Every winter semester close-
14550
Lecture
Lecture Series "Stuying the Middle East" - Transfers and Translations (Victoria Mummelthei (Coordinator), Lukas Mühlethaler and colleagues of the six disciplines as well as other colleagues)
Schedule: Mo 16:00-18:00 (Class starts on: 2022-10-31)
Location: 1.2051 Seminarraum -- please inquire the option to participate online from the relevant lecturers of the session
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14551
Methods Tutorial
Against boring academic texts: Methods of Studying the Middle East (Victoria Mummelthei)
Schedule: Mo 12:00-14:00 (Class starts on: 2022-10-24)
Location: 2.2059 Seminarraum and asynchronously online
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14550
Lecture
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Interdisciplinary Perspectives on the Middle East
0593aA1.2Learning objectives:
Students gain advanced skills need to conduct independent research in Interdisciplinary Studies of the Middle East from a global perspective. They can position themselves and situate complex issues from the fields of cultures, literatures, languages, history, and societies of the Near and Middle East in current debates, especially regarding the comparative analysis of processes and problems that cut across different regions. They are skilled to apply interdisciplinary methods to answer complex questions of Interdisciplinary Studies of the Middle East in writing and orally. They have broad, detailed, and up-to-date knowledge as well as a critical understanding of one or more subject areas in the transregional field of Interdisciplinary Studies of the Middle East.Content:
The module provides students with sound specialist knowledge of central topics in Interdisciplinary Studies of the Middle East from a global perspective. The module focuses on the comparative analysis of historical, social, and cultural formations regarding issues that have global relevance, such as gender, human rights, imperialism, nationalism, identity, language, and literature. Students are instructed to compare the effects of such processes in a differentiated manner regarding the Near and Middle East. They practice analyzing problems on their own from a cross-disciplinary and transregional perspective and apply interdisciplinary theories and methods.Modes of instruction/ Contact hours / Regular attendance required
Advanced seminar / 2 SWS / yesMethodology course / 2 SWS / yes
Module assessment
Term paper (approx. 5000 words)Language
English (or if applicable, Arabic, Hebrew, Persian, Syriac-Aramaic,Turkish)Total workload
450 hours (15 credit points)duration / Frequency
One or two semesters / Every semester close-
14553
Advanced Seminar
Politics and Society in the Middle East (Erol Saglam)
Schedule: Do 16:00-18:00 (Class starts on: 2022-10-20)
Location: 1.2051 Seminarraum (Fabeckstr. 23/25) or online
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14553
Advanced Seminar
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Communicating Research in Interdisciplinary Studies of the Middle East
0593aA1.3Learning objectives:
Students can plan and carry out research endeavors independently and present them comprehensibly. They are enabled to reflect on their research question and substantiate their approach, selection of methods and, if applicable, their choice of sources in the setting of scholarly discussions. They learn how to present the benefits of their theoretical and methodological approaches convincingly by contrasting them with other relevant approaches and explaining the advantages in relation to their thesis project.Content:
Both before and during the master’s thesis, students participate in a colloquium, where they discuss their concepts and open questions with fellow students and instructors. They present their topics, theoretical and methodological approaches to their thesis and initial results.Modes of instruction/ Contact hours / Regular attendance required
Colloquium/ 2 SWS / yesModule assessment
Poster presentation (approx. 10 minutes); the module assessment is graded on a pass/fail basis only.Language
English (or if applicable, Arabic, Hebrew, Persian, Syriac-Aramaic,Turkish)Total workload
150 hours (5 credit points)duration / Frequency
One or two semesters / Every semester close-
14561
Colloquium
(C) Communicating Research in ISME (Victoria Mummelthei; Lukas Mühlethaler)
Schedule: Mo 10:00-12:00 (Class starts on: 2022-11-07)
Location: 1.2051 or online - please see ISME's website and/or blackboard for details.
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14561
Colloquium