Department of Middle Eastern Studies


  • Old Threads, New Threads

    Faegheh Shirazi weaves a career in cultural textiles.

    Old Threads, New Threads

  • Peace in the Middle East…ern Studies Department

    Over 20 years ago, UT Austin’s Department of Middle Eastern Studies (MES) was characterized by intense volatility and internal conflict. After re-structuring itself around the principles of transparency, democracy, and egalitarianism, the department is now a bastion of support, respect, and cheerful collegiality.

    Peace in the Middle East…ern Studies Department

  • The Value of the Liberal Arts

    Those of us who teach in liberal arts colleges are passionate about the value of a liberal arts education. But for those outside of academia – even for those who might have received a degree in UT’s College of Liberal Arts – the precise meaning of “liberal arts” can be murky.  What, exactly, is meant by…

    The Value of the Liberal Arts

  • Leaf Through a Good Book

    Keep your to-read list up-to-date with our fall book list, featuring a selection of titles from College of Liberal Arts faculty members and alumni.

    Leaf Through a Good Book

  • Book Excerpt: From Prophets of Doom to Chroniclers of Gloom by M.R. Ghanoonparvar

    Much of the post-revolution fiction of Iranian authors presents the reader with often confused and desperate characters who live in an unstable world and express, as it were, a sense of urgency and focus on the present rather than the future. 

    Book Excerpt: From Prophets of Doom to Chroniclers of Gloom by M.R. Ghanoonparvar

  • A Look at Our Latest Books

    2021 Spring and Summer titles from our college community.

    A Look at Our Latest Books

  • Speaking the Same Language

    Jonathan Kaplan, an assistant professor in the Department of Middle Eastern Studies, noticed an influx of Afghan refugees at his daughter’s elementary school, which inspired him to create the Refugee Student Mentor Program (RSMP) in December 2014. The RSMP is a partnership between UT Austin’s Center for Middle Eastern Studies and the Austin Independent School…

    Speaking the Same Language

  • Using Your Mellon

    The College of Liberal Arts has a long and proud tradition of preparing its graduate students to teach and conduct research in the humanities at colleges and universities around the world, and we are particularly proud of our many placements in the nation’s top institutions. However, over the past two decades academic positions in the…

    Using Your Mellon

  • In Memoriam: Barbara Harlow, 1948-2017

    The gloom of the world is but a shadow. Behind it, yet within reach, is joy. There is radiance and glory in the darkness, could we but see, and to see, we have only to look. I beseech you to look. -Fra Giovanni   Only a handful of scholars embody relevant driving forces within multiple…

    In Memoriam: Barbara Harlow, 1948-2017

  • Architecture of Coexistence

    Stephennie Mulder, an associate professor in the Departments of Art and Art History and Middle Eastern Studies, was invited to Tehran, Iran, in February 2016 to receive the country’s World Award for Book of the Year from the Iranian Ministry of Culture, which was to be awarded in a ceremony by Iranian President Hassan Rouhani. Her…

    Architecture of Coexistence

  • Crossing Mental Boundaries

    The writer Lawrence Durrell once observed that travel is among the most rewarding forms of introspection, and students who study abroad bear this out. When they leave their comfort zones and experience life and learning in another culture, they return home knowing a lot more about themselves. Study abroad gives students context to better understand…

    Crossing Mental Boundaries

  • Thomas Jefferson’s Qur’an

    It was a chance discovery of a 1782 broadside—advertising a play performed in Baltimore about the Prophet Muhammad—that piqued the curiosity of Denise Spellberg, professor of history and Middle Eastern Studies. She wondered, why did Americans perform this play during the Revolutionary War? More importantly, the historian of Islamic civilization asked, what did early Americans know…

    Thomas Jefferson’s Qur’an

  • Hope for Peace in the Middle East

    Jason Brownlee, associate professor in the Departments of Government and Middle Eastern Studies, has received a $109,484 grant to examine peace-building efforts in Egypt. The funding, provided by the United States Institute of Peace (USIP), will enable Brownlee to determine whether the rise in Egypt’s anti-Coptic violence comes from underlying social tensions or from lack…

    Hope for Peace in the Middle East

  • Books: Fall 2012

    Fall 2012 titles from our college community.

    Books: Fall 2012

  • Humanities and the Military

    Sgt. Jeremy Couch and two fellow Texas Army National Guard soldiers enter the home of an Afghan family looking for information about escaped prisoners. In one corner, they see a Quran and a prayer rug. In another, a pair of rifles. Almost as soon as the soldiers sit down, they are besieged by demands for…

    Humanities and the Military

  • Professor Aaron Bar-Adon created Hebrew linguistics field

    Jerusalem, Israel — “Beresheet bara elohim et hashamayim veet haaretz (In the beginning, God created the heaven and the earth),” reads aloud Professor Aaron Bar-Adon in his rich, careful Hebrew, reminding the audience of possibly the most famous text from Genesis in the Old Testament. “This is the drama of the creation of the world,”…

    Professor Aaron Bar-Adon created Hebrew linguistics field

  • Retired Faculty: Spring 2011

    More than 30 College of Liberal Arts professors from more than a dozen departments have retired over the past year, after spending decades serving their students and the university community. Retirees include Linguistics Professor Robert King, who was the founding dean of the College of Liberal Arts and served in that post from 1979–1989 and…

    Retired Faculty: Spring 2011

  • Books: Spring 2011

    Spring 2011 titles from our college community.

    Books: Spring 2011

  • Learning Hebrew Gothic

    Middle Eastern Studies professor wins award to study literary genre No one has ever studied it before. In fact, most scholars didn’t even recognize its existence. But thanks to the newly created Humanities Research Award, Karen Grumberg will be the first scholar to investigate the literary genre of Hebrew Gothic. Grumberg, an assistant professor in…

    Learning Hebrew Gothic

  • A Towering Mystery Solved

    Why ancient alphabets adorn a university icon When then-Harvard University Professor John Huehnergard and his wife and colleague Jo Ann Hackett first visited The University of Texas at Austin last year, they couldn’t help but notice the ancient Phoenician and Hebrew letters that adorn the Tower. After all, Hackett, a Hebrew scholar, and Huehnergard, who…

    A Towering Mystery Solved

  • Book News: Fall 2010

    Pioneering With A Pen For creating the most vivid and vital portrayal of the American experience in microcosm, Creative Writing graduate Nora Boxer has won the $50,000 Keene Prize for Literature. Her story “It’s the song of the nomads, baby; or Pioneer,” was selected from 61 submissions in drama, poetry and fiction. Laconic in style,…

    Book News: Fall 2010