Hi friends! Next Thursday (23 Jan) the Education Building will be host to a discussion on What does it mean to be a Muslim woman in Canada today? For more information check here.
Hope to see you there!
Hi friends! Next Thursday (23 Jan) the Education Building will be host to a discussion on What does it mean to be a Muslim woman in Canada today? For more information check here.
Hope to see you there!
Hi friends! Dr. K. Medani of the IIS and PoliSci at McGill is in the news, again! In this piece he offers his opinion on the current developments in the South Sudan.
And another interview in Jadaliyya.
Enjoy!
Hi friends! In less than 2 weeks le Cénacle culturel Liban-Québec invites you for an Arabic poetry reading by current Director of the IIS, Prof. Rula Jurdi Abisaab. This will be followed by poems translated into English and French by Prof. Michelle Hartman of the IIS, Poet Nadine Ltaif and McGill Doctoral candidate Hadi Fakhoury. Oud musician, Mr. Isam Haddad will play some pieces of Arabic music.
The event will take place on Saturday, January 25th, 2014 from 5:00-7:00 at the Ballroom on the 3rd Floor of Thomson House, 3650 McTavish Street, Montreal, H3A 1Y2 Phone:(514)398-3756. (Between Pine Avenue and Dr. Penfield Avenue).
The Event is also supported by Nelson Publishing House.
Hi friends! Dr. Khalid Medani of the Institute of Islamic Studies and Politic Science was recently interviewed about the events unfolding in the South Sudan. Click here to hear his thoughts.
The following document is a selection of online primary sources available not only at McGill Library but also on the web, compiled for HIST 591 Course (Fall 2013):
DATABASES AVAILABLE @ MCGILL
– Archives unbound. Gale, Cengage Learning, 2012.
Archives Unbound presents topically-focused digital collections of historical documents.
– Confidential Print: Middle East. Marlborough, Wiltshire, England: Adam Matthew Digital, 2000.
The Confidential Print series, issued by the Foreign and Colonial Offices since c. 1820, originated out of a need for the Government to preserve all of the most important papers generated by the Foreign and Colonial Offices. Some of these are one-page letters or telegrams; others are large volumes or texts of treaties.
It covers the Egyptian reforms of Muhammad Ali Pasha in the nineteenth century, the Middle East Conference of 1921, the Mandates for Palestine and Mesopotamia and the Suez Crisis in 1956, the partition of Palestine, post-Suez Western foreign policy and the Arab-Israeli conflict.
All documents are fully text-searchable.
– Foreign Broadcast Information Service (FBIS) Daily reports
Foreign Broadcast Information Service (FBIS) Daily Reports consists of daily reports published from September 4, 1941 through March 29, 1974
Foreign Broadcast Information Service (FBIS) Daily Report Annexes consists of annexes created by the U.S. intelligence community to benefit analysts and policy makers, originally published from April 1974 through September 1996.
– The Listener: historical archives (1929-1991). Gale, Cengage Learning, 2011.
The Listener was a weekly publication, established by the BBC in 1929 as the medium for reproducing radio – and later, television – programmes in print. It is the only record and means of accessing the content of many early broadcasts. In addition to expanding on the intellectual broadcasts of the week, it also discussed contemporary issues (including political issues), and regularly reviewed new books. 10% of its content was actually not connected to broadcasting at all. What united the very diverse articles was the BBC’s cultural mission of educating the masses. Having chronicled the transformative rise of radio and television, The Listener finally ceased publication in 1991, just on the dawn of the internet age.
– PAIS Archive (1915-1976)
Consists of indexing and abstracting of articles, books, conference proceedings, government documents, book chapters, and statistical directories about public affairs.
– ProQuest historical annual Reports
Provides access to 43,000 annual reports (1844-current) of over 800 companies. Searchable puff images with indexed data such as: financial, Fortune 500 ranking, industry classification, key people, geographic location, auditor and related companies.
– World News Connection
Offers translated and English language news and information compiled from non-United States media sources.
Coverage includes political, environmental, scientific, technical, and socioeconomic issues and events.
Contains information derived from full-text and summaries of newspaper articles, conference proceedings, television and radio broadcasts, periodicals, and non-classified technical reports.
ON THE INTERNET: DIGITAL COLLECTIONS AND WEBSITES
– ARTstor
ARTstor is a digital Library of nearly one million images in the areas of art, architecture, the humanities and social sciences. Browse by geographical area to find images of the Middle East.
– The Avalon Project. Yale Law School
The Avalon Project includes documents relevant to the fields of Law, History, Economics, Politics, Diplomacy and Government. Collection: “The Middle East 1916-2001: a documentary record”
– British History online. Institute of Historical Research, and History of Parliament Trust
BHO is the digital library containing some of the core printed primary and secondary sources for the history of the British Isles, including administrative, legal, and parliamentary documents. Created by the Institute of Historical Research and the History of Parliament Trust, it aims to support academic and personal users around the world and their learning and research.
– EuroDocs. Richard Hacken, European Studies Bibliographer at the Harold B. Lee Library, Brigham Young University, Provo, Utah, USA.
Online sources for European History: includes legal and governmental documents, transcriptions, facsimiles and commentaries
– Gallica. Bibliothèque Nationale de France
– Gertrude Bell Archive. Newcastle University Library
The Gertrude Bell Archive comprise Gertrude’s personal correspondence, diaries and miscellaneous items, such as Review of the Civil Administration of Mesopotamia (1920), notebooks, obituaries, lecture notes and miscellaneous reports, memoranda and cuttings. Approximately 1,600 letters and diaries covering the years 1877-1879 and 1893-1900 (with some gaps reflecting where there is no hard-copy of the diary) can be found transcribed on this website, along with approximately 7,000 of her archaeological and travel photographs.
– Internet Archive
The Internet Archive is a non-profit organization building a digital library of Internet sites and other cultural artifacts in digital form. Like a paper library, IA provides free access to researchers, historians, scholars, the print disabled, and the general public.
Sources are primarily on and from the U.S. but the Internet Archives makes accessible some very interesting books (travel accounts, or memoirs) digitized. Search by country name (Sudan, Syria, Algeria, etc…)
– Matson (G. Eric and Edith) Photograph Collection. Library of Congress
The G. Eric and Edith Matson Photograph Collection is a rich source of historical images of the Middle East. The majority of the images depict Palestine (present day Israel and the West Bank) from 1898 to 1946. Most of the collection consists of over 22,000 glass and film photographic negatives and transparencies created by the American Colony Photo Department and its successor firm, the Matson Photo Service. Over 1,000 photographic prints and eleven albums are also part of this collection.
Digital images for the negatives and transparencies and a sample of the photographs are available online.
– The Middle East in Early Prints and Photographs. New York Public Library
This digital collection gives access to several thousand prints and photographs contained in works from the 17th century to the beginning of the 20th century. These include books illustrated with prints or photographs, photograph albums, and archival compilations; the processes represented range from engravings to lithographs, and from salt prints to heliogravures.
– The Palestine Poster Project Archives. Dan Walsh, MA student at Georgetown University (2011)
The Palestine Poster Project Archives is a web-based archives that displays a broad range of Palestine posters in a searchable format with each poster translated and interpreted. Titles included are from the Liberation Graphics collection, the Library of Congress, the Central Zionist Archives in Jerusalem, the International Institute of Social History in Amsterdam, Yale University, the University of Chicago and a host of other sources. Currently, archives contains 5593 posters and 1237 artists
– Palestinian Academic Society for the Study of International Affairs
This collection of maps covers much of Palestine’s modern history. While many of these maps represent PASSIA’s own work, others are drawn from secondary sources – as indicated beneath the individual maps.
– Perry-Castañeda Library Map Collection. University of Texas at Austin.
This University of Texas at Austin Libraries website offers access to a great number of their historical maps which have been digitized. It also provides a lengthy list of links to some other historical maps websites. Both their digital collection of historical maps and the list of websites can be browsed by geographic region (Africa / Middle East).
– Sudan Open Archives. Rift Valley Institute, 2005.
The Sudan Open Archives offers free digital access to historical and contemporary books and documents about all regions of Sudan. It is an expanding, word-searchable, full-text database.
– United Nation Relief and Works Agency (UNRWA) Photo archive
– World Ditigal Library
The World Digital Library (WDL) makes available on the Internet, free of charge and in multilingual format, significant primary materials from countries and cultures around the World. The “Middle-East and North Africa” corpus includes 1712 documents.
Hi friends!
The BBC has recently launched a 20-part series exploring the Islamic Golden Age. Currently available for your listening pleasure are discussions with Jonathan Bloom, Robert Gleave and Hugh Kennedy. The McGill Library and the ISL have the works of these authors, too. An easy way to search in McGill’s WorldCat local is to use “au: surname, first name” (without the quotation marks) which will return all of the works held by McGill of the author you search for. For example, au: Bloom, Jonathan.
The Islamic Golden Age 20 part series.
A special thank you to McGill’s web librarian and avid BBC enthusiast, Ed Bilodeau for passing along the link.
Hi friends!
A (much) belated congratulations to the new Chair of Urdu Language and Culture, Dr. Pasha M. Khan. Dr. Khan began in the Institute of Islamic Studies last year and has quickly risen ranks!
If you haven’t, be sure to take a read through Dr. Khan’s impressive PhD dissertation entitled “The Broken Spell: The Romance Genre in Late Mughal India.” Or his essay on “The Lament for Delhi ( Fughan-i Dihli).”
Congratulations, Dr. Khan.
Everyone,
The 14th FMA will be held from October 25th to November 9th, 2013 featuring more than 100 concerts, shows, debates, conferences and films! Check the program out!