Event

Reconsidering the 60s generation in the Arab world and beyond

Date
1 Dec 2023
Time
17:00 UK time
Speakers
Professor Yoav di Capua (The University of Texas at Austin)
Where
St Antony's College, Investcorp Lecture Theatre, 62 Woodstock Road OX2 6JF
Series
Middle East Centre Friday Seminar Series
Audience
Public
Booking
Not required
Abstract:

A common understanding of the 1960s is that of an integrated global era marked by a revolutionary quest for self-liberation, transnational solidarity, sexual revolution, radical self-fashioning, anti-imperialism, a renewed understanding of gender and race relationships as well as an intellectual drive to articulate universal ethics of emancipation. But in the Arab world, with few exceptions, most narratives portray a radically different image: one of a failed revolutionary project marked by ideological bigotry, political messianism, personality cults, ethnocentric particularism, economic ruin, and an overall sense of a cultural defeat. Are these two images reconcilable? In this talk – the fruit of a decade of research on Arab thought – I offer a comprehensive empirical, theoretical, and methodological reassessment of the Arab 60s as a global pursuit with lessons that transcend the geography of the Middle East.

Biography:

Yoav Di-Capua is a Professor of History at the University of Texas at Austin, where he teaches modern Arab intellectual history. He is the author of Gatekeepers of the Arab Past: Historians and History Writing in Twentieth-Century Egypt (University of California Press, 2009) and No Exit: Arab Existentialism, Jean Paul Sartre and Decolonization (University Press of Chicago, 2018). His work appeared in the American Historical Review, Modern Intellectual History, Past & Present among other places. Supported by the Simon Guggenheim Foundation, he is currently at work on The First Arabs: An Intimate History of Their Struggle for Dignity and The Aftermath of Defeat.