What Have We Learned? Israel’s Genocide — One Year On Featuring: Ghassan Hage Hosted by: Bassam Haddad Tuesday, 4 November 2024 1:00 PM EST | 8:00 PM Palestine Join our 10th edition of “What Have We Learned?” after one year of Israel’s Genocide, with Ghassan Hage, hosted by Bassam Haddad. Scholars, journalists, activists, and authors select 5 themes/topics and analyze what we have learned about them. Gaza in Context Project is billing this series as lessons learned, one year on, to break through the fog of observations, narratives, data, propaganda, and images we unfathomably continue to access/witness every day. These conversations are relatively short, intense, and insightful, delivered by thoroughly engaged speakers. Catch our next Episode this week with Ghassan Hage. Gaza in Context Collaborative Teach-In Series We are together experiencing a catastrophic unfolding of history as Gaza awaits a massive invasion of potentially genocidal proportions. This follows an incessant bombardment of a population increasingly bereft of the necessities of living in response to the Hamas attack in Israel on October 7. The context within which this takes place includes a well-coordinated campaign of misinformation and the unearthing of a multitude of essentialist and reductionist discursive tropes that depict Palestinians as the culprits, despite a context of structural subjugation and Apartheid, a matter of consensus in the human rights movement. The co-organizers below are convening weekly teach-ins and conversations on a host of issues that introduce our common university communities, educators, researchers, and students to the history and present of Gaza, in context. Co-Organizers: Arab Studies Institute, Georgetown University’s Center for Contemporary Arab Studies, George Mason University’s Middle East and Islamic Studies Program, Rutgers Center for Middle Eastern Studies, Birzeit University Museum, Harvard’s Center for Middle Eastern Studies, Brown University’s Center for Middle East Studies, University of Chicago’s Center for Contemporary Theory, Brown University’s New Directions in Palestinian Studies, Georgetown University’s Center for Muslim-Christian Understanding, Simon Fraser University’s Centre for Comparative Muslim Studies, Georgetown University-Qatar, American University of Cairo’s Alternative Policy Studies, Middle East Studies Association’s Global Academy, University of Chicago’s Center for Middle Eastern Studies, CUNY’s Middle East and Middle Eastern American Center, University of Illinois Chicago’s Arab american cultural Center, George Mason University’s AbuSulayman’s Center for Global Islamic Studies, University of Illinois Chicago’s Critical Middle East Studies Working Group, George Washington University’s Institute for Middle East Studies, Columbia University’s Center for Palestine Studies, New York University’s Hagop Kevorkian Center for Near Eastern Studies Featuring Ghassan Hage is professor of anthropology at the University of Melbourne. He has held several visiting professorships across the world including at the American University of Beirut, at the University of Paris, The University of Copenhagen, the University of Keio in Tokyo, and Harvard. He was recently a visiting professor at the Max Planck Institute of Social Anthropology in Germany but his professorship was terminated because of his critiques of Zionism. He works in the fields of theoretical anthropology, the anthropology of nationalism, multiculturalism and racism, and the anthropology of migration. He is the author of several works including Alter-Politics: Critical Anthropology and the Radical Imagination (2015) and Is Racism an environmental threat? (2017), Decay 2020), The Diasporic Condition: Ethnographic Explorations of the Lebanese in the World (2021), The Racial Politics of Australian Multiculturalism (2023). His most recent work Pierre Bourdieu's Political Economy of Being is forthcoming with Duke University Press in 2025. Bassam Haddad (Host) is Founding Director of the Middle East and Islamic Studies Program and Associate Professor at the Schar School of Policy and Government at George Mason University. He is the author of Business Networks in Syria: The Political Economy of Authoritarian Resilience (Stanford University Press, 2011) and co-editor of A Critical Political Economy of the Middle East (Stanford University Press, 2021). Bassam is Co-Founder/Editor of Jadaliyya Ezine and Executive Director of the Arab Studies Institute. He serves as Founding Editor of the Arab Studies Journal and the Knowledge Production Project. He is co-producer/director of the award-winning documentary film, About Baghdad, and director of the acclaimed series Arabs and Terrorism. Jadaliyya Subscribe: https://www.youtube.com/@Jadaliyya?sub_confirmation=1 http://instagram.com/jadaliyya http://twitter.com/jadaliyya http://jadaliyya.com #Jadaliyya

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