
Dr. Shaherzad Ahmadi
Please welcome Dr. Shaherzad Ahmadi as new Director of the Luann Dummer Center for Women!
Fall 2023 Courses
Course - Section | Title | Days | Time | Location | ||||
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HIST 118 - W01 | Middle East and North Africa | - T - R - - - | 0955 - 1135 | MHC 305K | ||||
Description of course Genetics B/ Lab: |
Days of Week:- T - R - - - Time of Day:0955 - 1135 Location:MHC 305K Course Registration Number:40928 (View in ClassFinder) Credit Hours:4 Credit Hours Instructor:Shaherzad R. Ahmadi Introduces students to historical reasoning. Students learn to analyze historical evidence in context in order to explain how the past produced the ever-changing present. This course introduces students to the history and cultures of the Middle East and North Africa, focusing on the region's interaction with global powers. With special attention placed on global developments and local responses, the course will highlight the origins and expansion of Islamic empires, modern interactions with the West through imperialism and oil concessions, responses to this interaction from nationalist, secularist, and Islamist movements, and the issues these responses generate in the present day, including questions of ethnic conflict and religious pluralism. Schedule Details
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HIST 264 - 01 | Hist of Medicine & Health Care | - T - R - - - | 1525 - 1700 | OEC 210 | ||||
Description of course Genetics B/ Lab: |
Days of Week:- T - R - - - Time of Day:1525 - 1700 Location:OEC 210 Course Registration Number:42463 (View in ClassFinder) Credit Hours:4 Credit Hours Instructor:Shaherzad R. Ahmadi This course explores how people have thought about bodies, illness, and medical treatment over the last several centuries, specifically in the western and Middle Eastern contexts. By investigating the origins of different medical epistemologies, we highlight both the development and spread of Western medicine. In the Middle Eastern context, we will analyze native concepts of health and healing, pandemics and disease during the colonial era, the proliferation of medical disciplines during the nineteenth century, and the professionalization (as well as privatization) of health care in the twentieth and twenty-first centuries. Prerequisite: One 100-level history course. Schedule Details
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J-Term 2024 Courses
Course - Section | Title | Days | Time | Location | ||||
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HIST 118 - L01 | Middle East and North Africa | - T W R F - - | 1300 - 1600 | |||||
Description of course Genetics B/ Lab: |
Days of Week:- T W R F - - Time of Day:1300 - 1600 Location:
Course Registration Number:10337 (View in ClassFinder) Credit Hours:4 Credit Hours Instructor:Shaherzad R. Ahmadi Introduces students to historical reasoning. Students learn to analyze historical evidence in context in order to explain how the past produced the ever-changing present. This course introduces students to the history and cultures of the Middle East and North Africa, focusing on the region's interaction with global powers. With special attention placed on global developments and local responses, the course will highlight the origins and expansion of Islamic empires, modern interactions with the West through imperialism and oil concessions, responses to this interaction from nationalist, secularist, and Islamist movements, and the issues these responses generate in the present day, including questions of ethnic conflict and religious pluralism. Schedule Details
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Spring 2024 Courses
Course - Section | Title | Days | Time | Location | ||||
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HIST 395 - D02 | Topics: US in World::Mid East | - T - R - - - | 0955 - 1135 | BEC LL07 | ||||
Description of course Genetics B/ Lab: |
Days of Week:- T - R - - - Time of Day:0955 - 1135 Location:BEC LL07 Course Registration Number:22608 (View in ClassFinder) Credit Hours:4 Credit Hours Instructor:Shaherzad R. Ahmadi Since the founding of the United States, various interest groups have argued the federal government either exert or limit its influence abroad. From missionaries to tourists, commercial interests to immigrants, many have shaped the interactions between the American public and state with the Islamic world. Depending on popular sentiments and global tensions, the US has shifted the political tenor, financial commitments, and cultural investments of its relationships in the region. These policies have had consequences for internal American dynamics, as the nation's demographics continued to transform. This course examines the relationship of the United States, as well as American non-state actors, with the states and populations of the MidEast and North Africa. Schedule Details
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