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TEACHING

Hamid Dabashi has received awards and recognitions for his teaching at Columbia University and elsewhere, including a Certificate of Appreciation from Columbia College Students, ranked a Golden Nugget by student-initiated evaluations, as well as repeatedly nominated for both the Van Doren and the Presidential Teaching Award.

He is the founding Executive Committee member and the Director of Graduate Studies (2001-2005) of the Institute for Comparative Literature and Society at Columbia University, where he has taught theories of comparative literature for over a decade, and where he is chiefly responsible for opening up the study of Persian literature and Iranian culture at Columbia University to students of comparative literature and society, breaking away from the confinements of European Orientalism and American Area Studies.

Currently he teaches the social and intellectual history of Iran, Western Asia (the Middle East) and North Africa, Comparative Literature and Literary Theory, and World cinema. 

His courses and seminars in the Department for Middle East and Asian Languages and Cultures and the Institute for Comparative Literature and Society at Columbia include:

Graduate Seminar in Comparative Literature

Senior Seminar in Comparative Literature

Cinema and Society in Asia and Africa

Cinema and Revolution in Cuba and Iran

Shi’ism:  A Historical and Comparative Perspective

Epics and Empires:  On Ferdowsi’s Shahnameh

Empires:  A Comparative Perspective

Colonialism:  A Global Perspective

Modern and Medieval Islamic Political Thought

ADMINISTRATION

Hamid Dabashi has chaired the Department of Middle East and Asian Languages and Cultures (MEALAC) and is a founding member of the Executive Committee of the Center for Comparative Literature and Society. He has been the Associate Director of the Center for Comparative Literature and Society (CCLS), the Director of Graduate Studies at MEALAC and CCLS, and the Chair of the Core Curriculum Committee of Columbia College. He has also been the Executive Secretary for the Society of Iranian Studies, convening its first Biennial Conference in 1994 in Washington, DC.

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