Curriculum vitae julia Clancy-Smith  Chronology of Education



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October 2011

CURRICULUM VITAE

Julia Clancy-Smith
Chronology of Education

Georgetown University B.S.F.S. 1972 (BS Foreign Service)

Georgetown University M.A. 1978 (History)

École des Hautes Études en Sciences

Sociales/Collège de France, Paris 1976-77; 1979-80; 1981-82

American University in Cairo 1979 (Arabic)

University of California, Los Angeles Ph.D. 1988 (History)
Chronology of Employment

University of Virginia - Adjunct Professor, 1987-1988

University of Virginia - Assistant Professor, 1988-1993

University of Virginia - Associate Professor, 1993-1994

University of Arizona - Associate Professor, 1995-2008

University of Arizona - Full, 2009-


Honors and Awards

American-Tunisian Association Award, 1990


Book Awards:
Mediterraneans: North Africa and Europe in an Age of Migration, c. 1800-1900. Berkeley: University of California Press, 2011.

  • Winner of the 2011 Alf A. Heggoy Book Prize, French Colonial Historical Society.

  • Winner of the 2011 Phi Alpha Theta History Honor Society Award for Best Subsequent Book.

[Reviewed by Gillian Weiss in H-France Review, 11, 206 (September 2011); and by Kay Adamson, Reviews in History (spring/summer 2011) the Institute of Historical Research's electronic reviews journal, University of London.]

Rebel and Saint: Muslim Notables, Populist Protest, Colonial Encounters (Algeria and Tunisia, 1800-1904). Berkeley: University of California Press, 1994.

* Winner of the 1995 Alf A. Heggoy Book Prize, French Colonial Historical Society.

* Winner of the 1995 Book Award, Phi Alpha Theta History Honor Society.

* Winner of Honorable Mention in the 1995 Albert Hourani Book Award, the Middle East

Studies Association.

Recipient of the 2011 Barbara Kanner Book Prize by the Western Association of Women Historians. Collective award for Contesting Archives: Finding Women in the Sources­, ed. Nupur Chaudhuri, Sherry Katz, and Mary Elizabeth Perry. Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 2010.



Major Teaching Awards:

University of Virginia, Dean's Award for Excellence in Teaching, 1990.

University of Virginia, Adelle F. Robertson Teaching Award, Continuing Education, 1993.

University of Virginia First Annual T. Braxton Woody Teaching Award, 1994.

University of Arizona, SBS 2003 Most Distinguished Teacher in Graduate Level Courses.

American Historical Association, 2006-07 James Harvey Robinson Prize for Outstanding Contribution to the Teaching and Learning of History, collectively awarded to the contributors to the World History Matters, Center for History and New Media Project, George Mason University.

2009 American Historical Association’s William Gilbert Award for Best Article on Teaching

History for AAn Undergraduate and Graduate Colloquium in Social History and Biography in the Modern Middle East and North Africa.”

American Historical Association, the University of Arizona’s History Department was the 2012 recipient of the Equity Award for institutions which recognizes achieved excellence in recruiting and retaining under represented minorities in the historical profession.
Other Major Honors:

Udall Center for Public Policy Fellowship, University of Arizona, 1999.

Distinguished Visiting Professor, 2004, Department of History, The American University in Cairo, Egypt.

National Humanities Center, North Carolina, Research Fellowship, 2004-05.

Institute for Advanced Study, School of Social Science, Princeton, Fellow, 2009-2010.

Woodrow Wilson Research Center, Washington, DC, Research Fellow, 2011-1012.


National/international Service [Select List]

Advanced Placement, World History College Board member, Educational Testing Service, Princeton, 2003-2004.



Encyclopedia of Women and Islamic Cultures [international editorial board, E. J. Brill Publishers, Leiden, the Netherlands]; 6-volumes, 2003-2006.

Journal of the Muslim World [Hartford Seminary], editorial board, 1999-present.

Cambridge University Press (UK), Middle East/North Africa series, 1999-present.



Comparative Studies of South Asia, Africa and the Middle East, Board of Contributing Editors, 2003-present.

Board of Editors, Journal of Women=s History, 2004-present.

Committee on Committees (elected), the American Historical Association, 2004-2006.

The Canadian Centre for Architecture [Montreal], 2002-2004.

Middle East Studies Association (elected), Nominating Committee, 2003.

National Endowment for the Humanities, University of New Mexico, Faculty Development Program in Islam and Islamic Societies, 2002-2003.

Duke University, Islamic Networks, and Mediterranean Source book Research Group, 2004-05.

National History Center/American Historical Association, fellowship application reviewer, 2005-2006.

Fellowship applications reviewer, the National Humanities Center, 2005, 2006.

Nominator, MacArthur Fellows Program, 2006.

Executive Advisory Board of the Society for French Colonial Historical Studies, 2006-present.

International/interdisciplinary working group on APratiques culturelles dans les situations coloniales,@ [Cultural Practices of Colonialism], France, 2007-present.

Fulbright Scholars Program, and Centre d=Études Maghrébines à Tunis, undergraduate

and graduate advisor, Tunis, Tunisia, 2007.

African Biographies Project, Oxford University Press, Editorial Board, 2008-

Editorial Board the Journal of Colonialism and Colonial History, 2010-


Book Manuscript Evaluator for: University of California Press; Indiana University Press;

Stanford University Press; Bedford Books, St Martin=s Press; Cambridge University Press, UK;

Houghton Mifflin; Duke University Press; Ohio University Press; Routledge; University

of Minnesota Press; University of Washington Press; Oxford University Press; University of

Nebraska Press.
Article Evaluator for: Comparative Studies in Society and History; Middle East Journal; International Journal of African Historical Studies; Journal of African History; The Oral History Review; Gender and History; International Journal of Middle East Studies;

American Historical Review; Journal of the History of Ideas; French Historical Studies; Journal of Middle Eastern Women=s Studies; Cultural Anthropology; Journal of North African Studies; Institut des Belles Lettres Arabes; Journal of Modern History; Journal of Women’s History; Journal of Global History; Journal of Military History; Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society [London].
Scholarly Monographs:
Mediterraneans: North Africa and Europe in an Age of Migration, c. 1800-1900. Berkeley: University of California Press, 2011.
Rebel and Saint: Muslim Notables, Populist Protest, Colonial Encounters (Algeria and Tunisia, 1800-1904). Berkeley: University of California Press, 1994 (paperback 1997).

Edited Volumes/Special Issues:

Co-editor, introduction, and chapter. Domesticating the Empire: Languages of Gender, Race, and Family Life in French and Dutch Colonialism, 1830-1962. Charlottesville: University Press of Virginia, 1998.

Editor. North Africa, Islam, and the Mediterranean World from the Almoravids to the Algerian War. London: Frank Cass Publications, 2001. [also published as a special issue of the Journal of North African Studies (2001) 6, 5.]

Co-editor and introduction. French Historical Studies 27, 3 (summer 2004): 497-505, special issue AWriting French Colonial Histories.@

Co-editor, introduction, and chapter. Walls of Algiers: Narratives of the City through Text and Image. Los Angeles and Seattle: The Getty Research Institute and the University of Washington Press, 2009.

Co-editor and Introduction, “Fathers and Daughters in Islam.” Special issue of the Journal of



Persianate Studies 4, 1 (2011).

Editor, “Recent Trends in the Historiography of North Africa.” Special issue of the International



Journal of Middle East Studies (2012).
Textbooks:

Co-author, The Modern Middle East and North Africa: A History in Documents. New York:

Oxford University Press, 2012.

Author and editor, A History of the Maghrib. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2012.


Chapters in scholarly books: [all peer reviewed]

"Saints, Mahdis, and Arms: Religion and Resistance in Nineteenth Century North Africa." In Islam, Politics, and Social Movements, edited by Edmund Burke III and Ira Lapidus, 60-80. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1988.


"Between Cairo and the Algerian Kabylia: The Rahmaniya tariqa, 1715-1800." In Muslim Travellers: Pilgrimage, Migration, and the Religious Imagination, edited by Dale F. Eickelman and James Piscatori, 200-16. London: Routledge and Berkeley: University of California Press, 1991.
"The House of Zainab: Female Authority and Saintly Succession in Colonial Algeria." In Women in Middle Eastern History: Shifting Boundaries In Sex and Gender, edited by Nikki R. Keddie and Beth Baron, 254-274. New Haven: Yale University Press, 1992.


AThe 'Passionate Nomad' Reconsidered: A European Woman in l=Algérie Française (Isabelle Eberhardt, 1877-1904).” Western Women and Imperialism: Complicity and Resistance, edited by Nupur Chaudhuri and Margaret Strobel, 61-78. Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1992.
"The Shaykh and His Daughter: Coping in Colonial Algeria." Struggle and Survival in the Modern Middle East, edited by Edmund Burke III, 145-163. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1993.
"The Man With Two Tombs: Muhammad ibn cAbd al-Rahman, Founder of the Algerian Rahmaniya, c. 1715-1798." In Manifestations of Sainthood in Islam, edited by Grace Martin Smith & Carl W. Ernst, 147-169. Istanbul: Isis Press, 1994.
"The Colonial Gaze: Sex and Gender in the Discourses of French North Africa." In Franco- Arab Encounters, edited by L. Carl Brown and Matthew Gordon, 201-228. Beirut: American University of Beirut Press, 1996.
"La femme arabe: Women and Sexuality in France's North African Empire." In Women, the Family, and Divorce Laws in Islamic Society, edited by Amira El Azhary Sonbol, 52-63. New York: Syracuse University Press, 1996.


"A Woman Without Her Distaff: Gender, Work, and Handicraft Production in Colonial North Africa." In A Social History of Women and the Family in the Middle East, edited by Margaret Meriwether and Judith Tucker, 25-62. Boulder, Colorado: Westview Press, 1999.
AIslam, Gender, and Identities in the Making of French Algeria, 1830-1962.@ In Julia Clancy-Smith and Frances Gouda, eds., Domesticating The Empire: Languages of Gender, Race, and Family Life in French and Dutch Colonialism, 1830-1962, 154-174. Charlottesville: The University Press of Virginia, 1998.
AEnvisioning Knowledge: Educating the Muslim Woman in Colonial North Africa, 1850-1918. @ In Beth Baron and Rudi Matthee, eds., Iran and Beyond: Essays in Middle Eastern History in Honor of Nikki Keddie, 99-118. Los Angeles: Mazda Press, 2000.
AGender in the City: the Medina of Tunis, 1850-1881.@ In Africa=s Urban Past, edited by David M. Anderson and Richard Rathbone, 189-204. Oxford: Currey, 2000.
AEurope and Its Social Marginals in 19th-Century Mediterranean North Africa.@ Outside in: on the margins of the modern Middle East, edited by Eugene Rogan, 149-182. London: I. B. Tauris with the European Science Foundation, 2002.
AExemplary Women and Sacred Journeys: Women and Gender in Judaism, Christianity, and Islam from Late Antiquity to the Eve of Modernity.@ In Women=s History in Global

Perspective, ed. Bonnie G. Smith, 92-144. Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 2004.

(Also published separately as a pamphlet [52-pages] in the series, “Women and Gender in

Global Comparative Perspective.” Washington, DC: The American Historical

Association, 2005.)


A>Women on the move=: Gender and Social Control in Tunis, 1815-1870.@ In Femmes en villes, 209-237, ed. Dalenda Larguèche. Tunis: Centre de Publications Universitaires, 2006.
AAlgeria as mère-patrie: Algerian Expatriates in Tunisia, c. 1830-1914,@ Identity, Memory and Nostalgia: France and Algeria, 1800-2000, 3-17, ed. Patricia Lorcin. New York: Syracuse University Press, 2006.
ATrans-Sea Displacements and Problems of Legal Pluralism in the 19th-Century Mediterranean.@ The Mediterranean World: The Idea, The Past and the Present, 125-43, eds. Eyub Ozveren and Oktay Ozel. Ankara: University of Ankara Press, 2006. [also published in Turkish]
AL=Éducation des jeunes filles Musulmanes en Tunisie: Missionaires religieux et laïques@ In Le Pouvoir du Genre: Laïcités et Religions 1905-2005, 127-143, ed. Florence Rochefort. Toulouse: Presses Universitaires du Mirail, 2007. [“The Education of Muslim Girls in Tunisia: Religious and Secular Missionaries.”]
A>Making It= in Pre-Colonial Tunis: Migration, Work, and Poverty in a Mediterranean Port-City, c. 1815-1870.@ Subalterns and Social Protest, 213-236, ed. Stephanie Cronin. London: Routledge, 2007.
ALa Question de la femme.@ In Tzvetan Todorov, Le siècle de Germaine Tillion, 239-250,

ed., Todorov Tzvetan. Paris: Editions du Seuil, 2007. [“The Question of Women”].

“Exoticism, Erasures, and Absence: The Peopling of Algiers, 1830-1900.” In Walls of

Algiers: Narratives of the City through Text and Image, 19-61, eds. Zeynep Celik, Julia Clancy-

Smith, and Frances Terpak. Los Angeles: the Getty Research Institute and Seattle: University of

Washington Press, 2009.
ACrossings: Intellectuals as Travelers in the Mediterranean Borderland, Khayr al-Din Pasha,

c.1820-1890.@ In Réformes de l'Etat et réformismes au Maghreb (XIXe-XXe siècles), 161-196, ed. Odile Moreau. Paris: Éditions L'Harmattan-Institut de Recherche sur le Maghreb Contemporain, 2010.


“Where Elites Meet: Households, Harem Visits, and Sea-Bathing in Pre-Colonial Tunisia.” In Harem Histories: Lived Spaces and Imagined Places, 177-210, ed. Marilyn Booth. Durham: Duke University, 2010.
ALocating Women as Migrants in a Mobile World.” In Contesting Archives: Finding Women in the Sources­, 35-55, eds. Nupur Chaudhuri, Sherry Katz, and Mary Elizabeth Perry. Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 2010.
“Ruptures? Expatriates, Law, and Institutions in Colonial-Husaynid Tunisia, 1870-1914.” In Changes in Colonial and Post-Colonial Governance of Islam: Continuities and Ruptures, ed. Veit Bader, Annelies Moors, and Marcel Maussen. Amsterdam: University of Amsterdam, 2011.
“Muslim Princes and Catholic Missionaries in a Pre-colonial State: Tunisia, c. 1840-1881.”

In In God’s Empire: French Missionaries and the Modern World J. P. Daughton and Owen White, eds. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2011.


“Making a Living: the Sea, Contraband, and Other Illicit Activities in the 19th-Century Mediterranean World.” In A Colonial Sea: The Mediterranean, 1798-1956, special issue of the European Revue of History/Revue Europeanne d’histoire, 2011.
“From Household to School Room: Women, Networks, and Education in Colonial North Africa.” In Individuals and Social Change in the Muslim World: Trajectories of Subversives and Mavericks (late 19th-Early 20th Century), ed. Odile Moreau. Leiden: E. J. Brill, 2012.
Refereed journal articles: [all peer reviewed]

"In the Eye of the Beholder: The North African Sufi Orders and the Colonial Production of Knowledge, 1830-1900." Africana Journal 15 (1990): 220-57.


"A Visit to a Tunisian Harem." Journal of Maghrebi Studies 1-2, 1 (Spring 1993): 43-49.
La Révolte de Bu Ziyan en Algérie, 1849.@ Mahdisme et millé narisme en Islam. Special issue of Revues des Mondes Musulmans et de la Méditerranée nos. 91-94 (2001): 181-208. [“The Revolt of Bu Ziyan in Algeria, 1849.”]
AL=École Rue du Pacha à Tunis: l>education de la femme arabe et >la plus grande France= (1900-1914).@ Special issue, Le Genre de la Nation, Clio: Histoire, Femmes, Société 12 (Decembre 2000): 33-55. [“The School on Rue du Pasha, Tunis: The Education of the Arab Woman and “Greater France.”]
AWomen, Gender and Migration along a Mediterranean Frontier: Pre-Colonial Tunisia, c. 1815-c.1870.@ Gender and History 17, 1 (April 2005): 62-92.
Co-editor and introduction to Fathers and Daughters in Islam. Special Issue of the Journal of Persiante Studies (2011).

Making a Living: the Sea, Contraband, and Other Illicit Activities in the 19th-Century Mediterranean World.” In A Colonial Sea: The Mediterranean, 1798-1956, special issue of the European Revue of History/Revue Europeanne d’histoire, 2011, eds. Manuel Borutta and Athanasios Gekas.


Published Translations: [From French to English]:

Dalenda Larguèche, AThe Mahalla: the Origins of Beylical Sovereignty in Ottoman

Tunisia during the Early Modern Era.@ In Julia Clancy-Smith, ed. North Africa, Islam, and the Mediterranean World, 105-116. London: Frank Cass Publications, 2001.

Abdelhamid Larguèche, AThe City and the Sea: Evolving Forms of Mediterranean Cosmopolitanism in Tunis, c. 1700-1881.@ In, ibid., 117-128.


Pedagogical Essays: [all peer reviewed]

"The World at War: The Arab Role in the World Wars." In Arab World Almanac 2, 2 (Winter 1991): 5-9.


"The Middle East in World History." World History Bulletin 9, 2 (Fall-Winter 1992): 30-34.
Co-editor of special issue of Community College Humanities Review, AStudies in Islamic History and Cultures, A Articles from the National Endowment for the Humanities Summer Institute, The University of Arizona, 1996. Philadelphia, Pa.: Communities Colleges Humanities Association, August, 1997.
AAn Undergraduate and Graduate Colloquium in Social History and Biography in the Modern

Middle East and North Africa.” In Teaching Life Writing Texts, 233-238, ed. Miriam Fuchs

and Craig Howes. Modern Language Association Options for Teaching Series, Honolulu:

University of Hawaii Press, 2008.


“Germaine Tillion: A Twentieth-Century Life in World History.” In Special Issue, World History Bulletin 26, 1 (Spring 2010): 31-37.
State of the Art Essays: [all peer reviewed]
“The Maghrib and the Mediterranean World in the Nineteenth Century: Illicit Exchanges, Migrants, and Social Marginals." The Maghrib in Question, Kenneth J. Perkins and Michel Le Gall, eds., 222-249. Austin, Texas: University of Texas Press, 1997.
[In Italian] AWomen=s History: Where We Are.@Genesis [Rome] 11, 2 (2003): 238-42.
ANotions of Collaboration and Empire Revisited.@ Comparative Studies of South Asia & Africa and the Middle East 24, 1 (February 2004): 123-27.
AChanging Perspectives on Colonialism and Imperialism: Women, Gender, Empire.@ Historians and Historiography of the Modern Middle East, 70-100, eds. Israel Gershoni and Amy Singer. Seattle, Wash: University of Washington Press, 2006.
“The Intimate, the Familial, and the Local in Trans-National Histories of Gender.” Journal of

Women=s History, 18, 2 (2006): 174-83.
“The Middle East and North Africa in World History: The Past Decade.” In Ross E. Dunn, The World History Reader, 2nd, completely revised edition. Boston: Bedford Books of St. Martin=s Press, 2012.
Textbook Chapters:
“Algiers: From Ottoman Port to French Colonial Metropolis (c. 1800-1954).” In Places of Encounters: Time, Place, and Connectivity in World History, 2 vols., ed. Aran MacKinnon.
“Carthage: Gateway to the World Beyond the Mediterranean (c. 800 BCE-700 CE).” In Places of Encounters: Time, Place, and Connectivity in World History, 2 vols., ed. Aran MacKinnon.
Encyclopedia Articles:

"Halide Edib Adivar." In Great Lives from History: Twentieth Century, 915-19. Pasadena, Ca.: Salem Press, 1990.


"Naguib Mahfouz." In Great Lives from History: Twentieth Century, 1411-16. Pasadena, Ca.: Salem Press, 1990.
The Oxford Encyclopedia of the Modern Islamic World: four articles: "Kabylia," "Baraka," "Mawlay," & "Ahmad al-cAlawi." Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1995.
AIslamic Anti-colonial Revolts of the 19th Century,@ In Jack Goldstone, ed., The Encyclopedia of Political Revolutions, 260-263. Washington, D.C.: Congressional Quarterly Books, 1998.
AWomen and Islam in Africa,@ 2 volumes, Encyclopedia of Women and World Religions. New York: Macmillan Publishing, 1(1998): 500-503.

AAlbert Memmi and The Pillar of Salt.@ In African Literature and Its Times, edited by Joyce Moss, 337-346. Los Angeles, CA.: Moss Publication Group, 2000.


AThe Economic History of North Africa,@ Oxford Encyclopedia of Economic History Oxford: Oxford University Press, 3 (2003): 419-21.

Chapter: AColonialism: 18th to Early 20th Century,@ 6 vols. Methodologies, Paradigms and Sources of the six-volume Encyclopedia of Women and Islamic Cultures, ed. Suad Joseph. Leiden: E. J. Brill, volume 1 (2003): 100-115.

AWomen, Gender, and Missionary Education: North Africa.@ 6 vols. Economics, education,

mobility and space of the Encyclopedia of Women and Islamic Cultures, ed. Suad Joseph. Leiden: E. J. Brill, volume 4 (2006): 283-85.

ADjamila Bouhired.@ Oxford Encyclopedia of Women in World History, ed. Bonnie Smith. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2007.

Three entries: ATawhida b. Shaykh,@ ADjamila Bouhired,@ and AAssia Djebar,@ New Encyclopedia of Africa, 2nd edition. New York: Scribner=s/The Gale Group, 2007.

“Women in North Africa, 1750-present.@ [4,000 plus words] Encyclopedia of Women in World



History. 5 vols. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2007.

AAlgeria, 1750-present.@ [4,000 words] Encyclopedia of the Modern World. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2008.

AAhmad Bey,@ 3rd edition of Encyclopedia of Islam. Leiden: E. J. Brill, 2008. Volume 3: 98-102.

AJaza=iri `Abd al-Qadir al- (1808-1883).@ Encyclopedia of Islamic Political Thought. Princeton

Princeton University Press, 2011, 87-89.

Seven entries for Dictionary of African Biography. New York: Oxford University Press, 2011.

“Mediterranean Historical Migrations: An Overview.” In Encyclopedia of Global Human

Migration, ed. Dirk Hoerder and Donna Gabaccia. London: Wiley Blackwell 2012. [11,000 words]
Reprints, Second Editions, Excerpted Material, and Shorter Articles:

Wrote the sections on women in North Africa for the 2nd edition of Women in the Middle East & North Africa, Guity Nashat & Judith Tucker, eds. Volume two of Restoring Women to History. Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1999.


The Middle East in World History.@ Reprinted in Ross E. Dunn, ed., The World History Teacher: Essential Writings in a New Field. Boston: Bedford Books of St. Martin=s Press, 1999.
Rebel and Saint. Excerpted in Alice L. Conklin and Ian C. Fletcher, eds., European Imperialism, 1800-1930: Climax and Contradictions. Problems in European Civilization. New York: Houghton Mifflin, 1999, pages 197-204.
AThe Shaykh and His Daughter: Coping in Colonial Algeria." Struggle and Survival in the

Modern Middle East, ed. Edmund Burke. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1993.

Excerpted in Robert Tignor, et. al., Worlds Together, Worlds Apart: A History of the Modern



World from the Mongol Empire to the Present. New York: Norton, 2003.
“Le regard colonial: Islam, genre et identités dans L=Algérie Française.@ Trans. François Armengaud. Nouvelles Questions Féministes [Laussane] 25, 1 (2006): 25-40. [revised and translated version of an earlier article “The Colonial Gaze: Islam, Gender, and Identities in French Algeria.”]
AThe Shaykh and His Daughter: Coping in Colonial Algeria.@ In the 2nd revised, expanded

edition of the 1993 Struggle and Survival in the Modern Middle East, 119-136, ed.

Edmund Burke. Berkeley: University of California Press, 2007.

AThe >Passionate Nomad= Reconsidered: A European Woman in L=Algérie Française (Isabelle

Eberhardt, 1877-1904)." In Genealogies of Orientalism: History, Theory, Politics, edited by

Edmund Burke III and David Prochaska. Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press, 2008.


Wrote sections of Mediterranean Passages: Readings from Dido to Derrida, eds. Miriam Cooke, Erdag Göknar, and Grant Parker. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 2008.

André Raymond, 1925-2011, Review of Middle East Studies 45, 2 (Winter 2011).



Most Recent Published Book Reviews: [Over forty book and film reviews]

On-line book review, H-France, summer 2003, Roger Benjamin, Orientalist Aesthetics: Art, Colonialism, and French North Africa, 1800-1930.

Film Review: “Noyé par Balles” [ADrowning in Bullets@] (France and Algeria) 1992 52 min. Dir Philip Brooks, Producer Alan Hayling. Middle East Studies Association Bulletin 37, 2 (2003): 302-03.

Tal Shuval, La ville d=Alger vers la fin du XVIIIe siècle: Population et cadre urbain, Series CNRS Histoire. Paris: CNRS Editions, 2002. International Journal of Middle East Studies 36 (2004): 296-97.

Christian Windler=s La Diplomatie comme expérience de l=autre: Consuls Français au Maghreb, 1700-1840). Geneva: Droz, 2002. The Journal of Modern History 77, 1 (2005): 197-99.

Richard C. Keller, Colonial Madness: Psychiatry in French North Africa. Chicago: The

University of Chicago Press, American Historical Review 113, 3 (2008): 947-49.

Marnia Lazreg, Torture and the End of Empire: From Algiers to Baghdad. Princeton: Princeton

University Press, 2008. Review of Middle East Studies 43, 1 (summer 2009): 208-210.

Judith Scheele, Village Matters: Knowledge, Politics, and Community in Kabylia.

Suffolk UK: James Currey, 2009. International Journal of African Historical Studies 43, 1 (2010): 202-04.

Spencer D. Segalla, The Moroccan Soul: French Education, Colonial Ethnology, and



Muslim Resistance, 1912-1956. Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press, 2009. Review of Middle East Studies 44, 1 (Summer 2010): 123-25.

Matthew Connelly, L’arme secrete du FLN: Comment de Gaulle a perdu la guerre d’Algérie [2011 French translation of the 2002 English edition] « La vie des idées » online revue of the Collège de France, Paris.


Electronic Publications:
Website: Document-Based History of Women in Modern North Africa@

World History Matters, the Center for History and New Media Project, George Mason University, Women in World History project. I contributed a curriculum module entitled AWomen in North African History, 19th-20th centuries.@ [14 documents translated from French and Arabic, commentary, introductions, and teaching guide] http://chnm.gmu.edu/wwh; my module can be accessed at: http://chnm.gmu.edu/wwh/lessons/lesson9/lesson9
Work in Progress

Monograph: “From Household to School Room to Post-Colonial State: Educating and Schooling in North Africa, c. 1840-1970.” Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, UK.

AHistories of Enchantment: North African Women in Literature and Activism.@ Journal of Middle Eastern Women’s Studies.

AMaking Our Voices Heard: The Historian in Washington, DC.@

Translation and introduction. Ahmad abi ibn Diyaf’s Risala fi-l-mara’ [“Treatise on Women”].
Scholarly Presentations: [2003-2011]

Commentator, panel ACollaboration & Empire in the Middle East/North Africa,@ American Historical Association, Chicago, 2003.

AAlgeria as Mère-Patrie: Algerian >Expatriates= in Tunisia, c. 1830-1914,@ Society for French Colonial History, Toulouse, France, May 2003.

AWomen and Gender along a Migratory Frontier,@ international conference of the European Commission/EU, Antakya, Turkey, 2003.

ANew Approaches to the Study of Merchant Cities: 19th-Century Tunis,@ Centre of Modern Oriental Studies, Freie Universität, Berlin, 2003.

AWomen=s History: Where We Are,@ Terzo Congresso, Societa= Italiana Delle Storiche, Firenze, Italia, 2003.

AIntinéraires Méditerranéens: Migrations, Banissements, Expulsions,@ Université de Provence/CNRS/Maison Méditerranéenne des Sciences de l=Homme, Aix-en-Provence, 2003.

AWomen and Gender Along a Mediterranean Migratory Frontier: Pre-Colonial Tunisia, c. 1815-1870@ and AStruggle and Survival in the Modern Middle East and North Africa,@ American University in Cairo, Egypt, 2004.

Stanford University, Humanities Center, Mellow Workshops for the Stanford-Bay Area French Historical-Cultural Studies Group, 2004.

Closing Plenary address at the San Francisco State University, History Department, 2004.

AThe Peopling of Algiers: Exoticism, Erasures, and Absence, c. 1830-1900.@ Workshop and

ConferenceAThe Walls of Algiers: Artistic, Cultural, and Urban Forms in the Colonial and Post-colonial City.@ Getty Research Institute & Museum, in Los Angeles, 2004.



AWriting French Colonial Histories,@ Society for French Historical Studies, École des Hautes Études en Sciences Sociales, Centre National de Recherche Scientifique, and Bibliothèque Nationale de France, Paris, 2004.

AWomen, Gender, and Migration in 19th-century North Africa,@ Duke University, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill African Studies Seminar, 2004.

Commentator and panel organizer: ARethinking Reform, Reforming Narratives of History in the Muslim Mediterranean, 18th-20th Centuries,@ annual meeting, the Middle East Studies Association, San Francisco, 2004.

A>Crimes of the Heart= and Other Offenses: Women, Gender, and Legal Pluralism in Pre-Colonial Tunisia, c. 1830-1881,@ American Historical Association, Philadelphia, 2006.

AExemplary Women and Sacred Journeys: Teaching Women, Gender, and Religion,@ Roundtable on Women=s and Gender History in Global Perspective, American Historical Association, Philadelphia, 2006.

AKhayr al-Din al-Tunisi, a Mediterranean Odyssey,@ Itineraries in the Muslim Mediterranean Lecture Series, Department of History and The Center for World History, University of California, Santa Cruz, 2006.

AWhere Elites Meet: Sea-Bathing & Thermal Cures in Nineteenth-Century Tunisia,@ Society for French Historical Studies, University of Illinois, 2006.

AReligious Missions, Secular Missionaries, and Muslim Girls' Education in Tunisia, c. 1840 1914,@ French Colonial Historical Society, Dakar, Senegal, 2006.

AGiving Middle East Historians a Voice in Washington,@ workshop, National History Center/American Historical Association, Middle East Studies Association, Boston, 2006.

Comment and Chair: Panel, AFrom the Atlantic to the Nile: Constructing Western Tourism in the Colonial Age.@ Middle East Studies Association, 2006.

AHistories of Migration in Tunisia,@ Centre d=Études Maghrébines à Tunis, Tunisia, 2006.

AWhere Elites Meet: Reflections on Doing Colonial Histories.@ National History Center & Mellon Foundation, Decolonization Seminar, Library of Congress, 2006.

AKhayr al-Din al-Tunisi and a Mediterranean Community of Thought, c. 1820-1890.@ Center for Historical Studies and the Miller Center for the Study of Religion, the University of Maryland, College Park, 2007.

Comment and chair, panel ABiography, History, and the Ends of Empire,@ National History Center/American Historical Association, annual meeting, Washington, DC, 2008.

AWhere Elites Meet: Harem Visits, Sea-Bathing, and Sociabilities in Tunisia, c. 1830-1881,"

Caspar endowed lecture, Marquette University, 2008.

“Narratives of Reform and Piety: Muslim Princes and Catholic Missionaries in Pre-Colonial Tunisia.” Berkshire Conference on the History of Women, University of Minnesota, 2008.

“Ruptures? Expatriate Communities, Legal Pluralism, and Education in Husaynid-Colonial

Tunisia, c. 1870-1914,” international workshop, Changes in Colonial and Post-Colonial

Governance of Islam. Continuities and Ruptures. Leiden: Institute for the Study of Islam in the Modern World, 2008.

“The Trial of Giovanna Tellini, Tunis, 1868: Honor and Dishonor in the Historical Record,”

presidential panel, Social Science History Association, Miami, 2008.

AWhere Elites Meet: Harem Visits, Sea-Bathing, and Sociabilities in Tunisia, c. 1830-1881,"

Department of History Colloquium, Washington University, St. Louis, 2008.

Comment, chair, and panel convener, “Questioning Perceptions of Tunisian Women,” Middle

East Studies Association, Washington DC, 2008.

“Women, Gender, and Migration in North African History,” University of Minnesota international workshop “The Maghreb in the Twentieth Century,” 2009.

Abbasi Program in Islamic Studies, Stanford University, Forum “Charting Change, Challenging

Power: Women Leaders in Muslim Contexts,” moderator of forum, 2009.

“Locating Female Migrants in the Mediterranean World,” Western Association of Women

Historians, University of Santa Clara, 2009.

J. P. Getty Research Institute, Los Angeles, International Colloquium, “Walls of Algiers:

Reconsidering the Colonial Archive” 2009, in conjunction with the exhibition Walls of Algiers: Narratives of the City (May-October 2009).

Bellagio Center, Italy, international interdisciplinary conference, “Crimes of Honor in a Mobile

World, Past and Present,” 2009.

Commentator on two panels, “Fathers and Daughters in Islam,” and “Individuals and Society in the Modern Mediterranean World,” Middle East Studies Association, Boston, 2009.

“Gendered Mobilities in World History,” American Historical Association, San Diego, 2010.

“Education in 19th-Century North Africa,” Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton, 2010.

“From Household to School Room: Women, Gender, and Biography in Local

Maghribi Modernities, c 1880-1956.” Florence/Montecatini Terme, Robert Schuman Centre for Advanced Study, Italy, 11th Mediterranean Research Meeting, 2010.

“Locating Female Migrants in an Imperial World.” 8th European Social Science History

Conference, Ghent, Belgium, 2010.

Comment: “Trajectories of Subversives and Trouble-Makers in the Modern Mediterranean

World,” World Congress of Middle East Studies, Barcelona, Spain, 2010.

“Mediterraneans,” University of California, Los Angeles, symposium, 2011.

Three lectures for the 46th annual Furniss Lecture Series, Colorado State University, 2011.

“Muslim Princes and Catholic Sisters: How Gender Shaped Missionary Activity in 19th-Century

North Africa,” History Department and Women’s Studies, University of California-Davis, 2011.

“Barbary Coasts: How Mediterraneans Came to Be.” Immigration History Research Center,

University of Minnesota, 2011.

“Muslim Princes and Catholic Sisters: Missionaries as Migrants in 19th-Century North Africa,

Institute for Advanced Study, University of Minnesota, 2011.
Select Grants [external only]

American Philosophical Society, Research Grant, 1999.

American Philosophical Society, Sabbatical Grant, 2000.

National Endowment for the Humanities funded part of my two-semesters in residence at the

National Humanities Center, North Carolina, 2004-05.

American Institute for Maghreb Studies short-term research grant, 2008.

Spencer Foundation Research Grant, 2008

Institute for Advanced Study, School of Social Science, Princeton University, 2009-2010.

Woodrow Wilson Center for Research, Washington, DC, Research fellowship, 2011-2012.
Seminars/Summer Institutes

NEH, Summer Institute in World History, college faculty, University of California, Santa Cruz,

in-residence co-director, 1995.

NEH, Grant-writer and co-director, Summer Institute in Islam and Cultural Studies, college

faculty, University of Arizona, 1996.

NEH, Summer Institute, AArchitecture for World History,@ K-12 teachers, San Diego State

University, 2001-2003.

Mellon/American Historical Association/National History Center, international interdisciplinary,

summer seminar, ADecolonization & The End of Empire@ at the Library of Congress, Washington, D.C., 2006.

Conference Organiser:

Organizer of international conference, AThe Maghrib in World History,@ sponsored by the American Institute for Maghreb Studies, Tunis, Tunisia, 1998.









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