Pedram Khosronejad
Pedram Khosronejad is Adjunct Professor at the School of Social Sciences at Western Sydney University and the founding moderator of Anthropology of the Middle East and Central Eurasia (ACME) Network of the European Association of Social Anthropologists (EASA). He is internationally recognised for his contribution to the fields of visual piety and material religion; war, memory and forced displacement; gender, sexuality, and race including slavery in modern Iran and Persianate societies, the greater Middle East and Central Asia, the Muslim world and Australia. In particular, he explores the manners by which culture, memory, and visual material are bound up in as well as influenced and altered by wider political, social, and cultural trends.
Professor Khosronejad has taught at the University of Oxford (2004-2007) and was appointed as the Goli Rais Larizadeh Chair of the Iran Heritage Foundation for the Anthropology of Iran at the University of St Andrews (2007-2015). He was also a Visiting Professor at the National Museum of Ethnology, Osaka (2013-2014) and elected as a Visiting Professor at the Institute for Advanced Studies of Nantes (2014-2015). He also served as Farzaneh Family Scholar and Associate Director for Iranian and Persian Gulf Studies at the Oklahoma State University (2015-2019). Between July 2020 and January 2023, he was appointed as the Curator of Persian Arts at the Powerhouse Museum, Sydney.
His research has been funded by the Wenner-Gren Foundation, the British Academy, the French Ministry of Foreign Affairs, and the French National Centre for Scientific Research (CNRS), amongst others. His monograph, Les Lions en Pierre Sculptée chez les Bakhtiari: Description et significations de sculptures zoomorphes dans une société tribale du sud-ouest de l'Iran [Stone Lion Sculptures among the Bakhtiari: Descriptions and Meanings of Zoomorphoric Sculptures in a Tribal Society of South-western Iran] (Sean Kingston, 2012) remains as one of the pioneering pluridisciplinary investigations of the interconnections of memory, religion, and tribal sacred material culture. He has published in English, French, and Persian in Visual Anthropology, International Journal of Communication, Iranian Studies, Iran (Journal of the British Institute of Persian Studies, the British Academy), and Anthropology News. He has edited six interdisciplinary volumes and served as guest editor of two special issues on visual anthropology and anthropology of post-revolutionary Iran. He also designed and published three online interactive anthropological research platforms (Digital Humanities) on the topic of ‘Death and Dying’ based on a ten-year period extensive living and performing multifaceted ethnography amongst the Bakhtiari pastoral nomads of Iran. His documentary film The Last Lions of the Bakhtiari was financed by the British Academy, produced by the French National Centre for Scientific Research, and presented at several ethnographical film festivals including Regards Compare- Festival Jean Rouch and The Royal Anthropological Institute Film Festival.
Since August 2019, Professor Khosronejad has been working on a groundbreaking interdisciplinary research project about German civilian expatriates of Iran who had been detained by the British Army in Iran in 1941 after the country’s invasion during the Second World War, brought to the Australian Internment Prison Camps, and stayed in Australia since the end of war.
Supervisors: Thierry ZARCONE
Address: Western Sydney University, Sydney, Australia
Professor Khosronejad has taught at the University of Oxford (2004-2007) and was appointed as the Goli Rais Larizadeh Chair of the Iran Heritage Foundation for the Anthropology of Iran at the University of St Andrews (2007-2015). He was also a Visiting Professor at the National Museum of Ethnology, Osaka (2013-2014) and elected as a Visiting Professor at the Institute for Advanced Studies of Nantes (2014-2015). He also served as Farzaneh Family Scholar and Associate Director for Iranian and Persian Gulf Studies at the Oklahoma State University (2015-2019). Between July 2020 and January 2023, he was appointed as the Curator of Persian Arts at the Powerhouse Museum, Sydney.
His research has been funded by the Wenner-Gren Foundation, the British Academy, the French Ministry of Foreign Affairs, and the French National Centre for Scientific Research (CNRS), amongst others. His monograph, Les Lions en Pierre Sculptée chez les Bakhtiari: Description et significations de sculptures zoomorphes dans une société tribale du sud-ouest de l'Iran [Stone Lion Sculptures among the Bakhtiari: Descriptions and Meanings of Zoomorphoric Sculptures in a Tribal Society of South-western Iran] (Sean Kingston, 2012) remains as one of the pioneering pluridisciplinary investigations of the interconnections of memory, religion, and tribal sacred material culture. He has published in English, French, and Persian in Visual Anthropology, International Journal of Communication, Iranian Studies, Iran (Journal of the British Institute of Persian Studies, the British Academy), and Anthropology News. He has edited six interdisciplinary volumes and served as guest editor of two special issues on visual anthropology and anthropology of post-revolutionary Iran. He also designed and published three online interactive anthropological research platforms (Digital Humanities) on the topic of ‘Death and Dying’ based on a ten-year period extensive living and performing multifaceted ethnography amongst the Bakhtiari pastoral nomads of Iran. His documentary film The Last Lions of the Bakhtiari was financed by the British Academy, produced by the French National Centre for Scientific Research, and presented at several ethnographical film festivals including Regards Compare- Festival Jean Rouch and The Royal Anthropological Institute Film Festival.
Since August 2019, Professor Khosronejad has been working on a groundbreaking interdisciplinary research project about German civilian expatriates of Iran who had been detained by the British Army in Iran in 1941 after the country’s invasion during the Second World War, brought to the Australian Internment Prison Camps, and stayed in Australia since the end of war.
Supervisors: Thierry ZARCONE
Address: Western Sydney University, Sydney, Australia
less
InterestsView All (40)
Uploads
Videos by Pedram Khosronejad
Janet Afary
Mellichamp Professor of Religious Studies
UC Santa Barbara
Pedram Khosronejad has provided invaluable new information about the history of photography in Iran during the 19th-century Qajar period. In particular he has carefully researched the photographs taken by Naser al-Din Shah, perhaps the Qajar monarch most fascinated by Western technology. These intimate photographs of his own harem are unique and highly informative, not just for their intrinsic value in a period in which human images were disapproved of, but also for what they reveal about Naser al-Din Shah, his self-image, his household and his court.
William O. Beeman
Professor, Department of Anthropology
University of Minnesota
https://www.amazon.com/Royal-Lens-Al-Din-Photography-Studies/dp/099948012X?ref_=ast_sto_dp
Khosronejad’s observations further confirm Naser al-Din Shah’s deep-rooted connections to popular Shiite beliefs and related superstitions, along with his interest in Shiite rituals and ceremonies.
Thierry Zarcone, Directeur de recherche, Groupe Sociétés, Religions, Laïcités, CNRS, France.
https://www.amazon.com/Qajar-Shiite-Material-Culture-Religious/dp/0999480111?ref_=ast_sto_dp
This book is the first of its kind to use photographs of the Qajar period to prove the level of ability of the medium to document and simultaneously pathologise the history, culture, story, and maybe struggle of African slave communities in Qajar Iran.
https://www.amazon.com/Qajar-African-Nannies-Aristocratic-Studies/dp/0999480103?ref_=ast_sto_dp
Books by Pedram Khosronejad
با زحمات بیدریغ همکار گرامی سرکار خانم فاطمه معزی و دوستان نشر اطراف این کتاب کم نظیر بزودی در دسترس محققان و دوستداران تاریخ قاجار قرار خواهد گرفت.
وعده ما غرفه نشر اطراف - نمایشگاه بین المللی کتاب تهران (۱۹-۲۹ اردیبهشت)
Following two years of collaboration, our new book will be available for the 35th Tehran International Book Fair (8-18 May 2024). Of Joy & Sorrow (working title) is a compilation of the unpublished travelogues of Doustali-Khan Moayer al-Mamalek and Mirza Hassan Khan Mostowfi al-Mamlek while accompanying Mozaffar al-Din Shah Qajar, the King of Persia, during his second journey to Europe to attend the 1900 Paris Expo.
Moezzi, Fatemeh and Khosronejad, Pedram 2024 Of Joy & Sorrow. Tehran: Atraf
https://vimeo.com/414956130
Unveiling the Veiled:
Amir Doust Mohammad’s Camera Erotica
A Book by Pedram Khosronejad
Visual Studies of Modern Iran (4)
Cover Design: Kourosh Beigpour
September 2020
"Qajar Shiite Material Culture: From the Court of Naser al-Din Shah to Popular Religious Paintings", by Pedram Khosronejad.
Time Museum, Tehran.
Wednesday April 24th, 10:00-12:00.
Open to the public.
مکان: دانشگاه اصفهان ومجموعه فرهنگی تخت فولاد
زمان: 7 -13 اردیبهشت 1398
تماس:
safavidstudies@gmail.com
9131072378
Janet Afary
Mellichamp Professor of Religious Studies
UC Santa Barbara
Pedram Khosronejad has provided invaluable new information about the history of photography in Iran during the 19th-century Qajar period. In particular he has carefully researched the photographs taken by Naser al-Din Shah, perhaps the Qajar monarch most fascinated by Western technology. These intimate photographs of his own harem are unique and highly informative, not just for their intrinsic value in a period in which human images were disapproved of, but also for what they reveal about Naser al-Din Shah, his self-image, his household and his court.
William O. Beeman
Professor, Department of Anthropology
University of Minnesota
Khosronejad’s observations further confirm Naser al-Din Shah’s deep-rooted connections to popular Shiite beliefs and related superstitions, along with his interest in Shiite rituals and ceremonies.
Thierry Zarcone, Directeur de recherche, Groupe Sociétés, Religions, Laïcités, CNRS, France.
Symposia Persica | Photo Exhibition (Feb. 22-23)
Organizer and Curator: Dr. P. Khosronejad
The Qajar Lens: Diversity in Qajar Photography
Selection of photographs from: Aqa Reza Eqbal Al-Saltaneh, Amir Qajar, Abdollah Qajar, Antoin Sevruguin, and Luigi Montabone.
Suite 201 | School of Global Studies & Partnerships | Wes Watkins Centre | Oklahoma State University
Contact : Dr. P. Khosronejad, Associate Director for Iranian and Persian Gulf Studies
historical documentation of events, individuals and contexts were captured in these photographs. How should we read the histories recorded in such images and imaging practices? What kind of historical knowledge might they provide?
Can they provide historians and other scholars of the field with historical ‘traces’ that bear witness to things not put into words?
Keywords: Qajar Iran, Qajar photography, African slavery, photography of
African slavery
Visual Studies of Modern Iran NO.1
Qajar African Nannies: African Slaves and Aristocratic Babies
By
Pedram Khosronejad
Hardback (74pp, 19 full color ill.)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 0999480103
Product Dimensions: 8 x 0.3 x 8 inches
Design: Kourosh Beigpour & Pedram Khosronejad
https://www.amazon.com/Qajar-African-Nannies-Slaves-Aristocratic/dp/0999480103/ref=sr_1_2?ie=UTF8&qid=1509149995&sr=8-2&keywords=pedram+khosronejad
Interview with "Iran" News Paper, published today.
گفتوگو با «پدرام خسرونژاد»؛ مدیر گروه ایرانشناسی و مطالعات خلیج فارس دانشگاه ایالتی اوکلاهما در امریکا
به دنبال جذب ایرانیان به نوپاترین نهاد ایرانشناسی جهان
Vol 3, No 2
Chief Editor,
Pedram Khosronejad
Table of Contents
http://acmejournal.org/index.php/acme/issue/view/7
Articles
--------
Fluid identifications and persistent inequalities: Social boundary making
among Iranians in Hamburg
Sonja Moghaddari
A breadwinner or a housewife? Agency in the everyday image of the Georgian
woman
Natallia Paulovich
20 Fingers: Personal or political?
Sussan Siavoshi
Book Reviews
--------
REVIEW - Brennan, James R. Taifa: Making Nation and Race in Urban Tanzania.
292 pp. Athens, Ohio: Ohio University Press, 2012.
Katrina Daly Thompson
REVIEW- Contandini, Anna and Claire Norton (eds.). The Renaissance and the
Ottoman World. xiv + 303 pp. Surrey: Ashgate Publishing Limited, 2013.
Ülkü Ü. Bates
REVIEW - Leaman, Oliver. Controversies in Contemporary Islam. 230 pp. New
York: Routledge, 2014.
Abdessamad Belhaj
REVIEW - Najmabadi, Afsaneh. Professing Selves: Transsexuality and Same-Sex
Desire in Contemporary Iran. xii + 418 pp. Durham and London: Duke
University Press, 2014.
Mehran Rezaei
REVIEW - Schwanitz, Wolfgang G. Islam in Europa, Revolten im Mittelost:
Islamismus und Genozid von Wilhelm II und Enver Pascha über Hitler und
al-Husaini bis Arafat, Usama Bin Ladin und Ahmadinejad sowie Gespräche mit
Bernard Lewis, xii+784 pp. Berlin: tr
Lionel Gossman
Film Reviews
--------
REVIEW - Cinema Palestine. Dir. Tim Schwab. 79 mns. Arabic with English
subs. 2013.
Peter S. Allen
REVIEW - Face Patterns. Dir. Hadi Afarideh. 34 mns. Persian with English
subs. Documentary & Experimental Film Centre (DEFC), 2012.
Dido Tetley
REVIEW- Himself He Cooks. Dirs. Valérie Berteau, Philippe Witjes. 65 mns.
Polymorfilms, 2012.
Véronique Davis
REVIEW - I comme Iran – I for Iran. Dir. Sanaz Azari. 50 mns. Persian with
French subs. CVP, 2014.
Valentina Gamberi
REVIEW - In the Name of the Innovator of the Times and the Places. Dir.
Mahmoud Rahmani. 25 mns. 2006. Recognition (Sheasayi). Dir. Ephraim
Asgharzadeh. 3 mns. 2001. In the Name of God. The Independent Group of Ahwaz
Filmmakers. 19 mns. 2006.
Peter S. Allen
REVIEW - Lalaei e Jang (Lullaby of War). Dir. Habib Bavi Sajed. 18 mns.
Persian and Arabic with Persian subs. Documentary group of IRTV (Sima 1),
2012.
Mazyar Lotfalian
Index
--------
Index to Volume 3
Dr. Pedram Khosronejad
Chief Editor, Anthropology of the Contemporary Middle East and Central Eurasia, SeanKingston.
Janet Afary
Mellichamp Professor of Religious Studies
UC Santa Barbara
Pedram Khosronejad has provided invaluable new information about the history of photography in Iran during the 19th-century Qajar period. In particular he has carefully researched the photographs taken by Naser al-Din Shah, perhaps the Qajar monarch most fascinated by Western technology. These intimate photographs of his own harem are unique and highly informative, not just for their intrinsic value in a period in which human images were disapproved of, but also for what they reveal about Naser al-Din Shah, his self-image, his household and his court.
William O. Beeman
Professor, Department of Anthropology
University of Minnesota
https://www.amazon.com/Royal-Lens-Al-Din-Photography-Studies/dp/099948012X?ref_=ast_sto_dp
Khosronejad’s observations further confirm Naser al-Din Shah’s deep-rooted connections to popular Shiite beliefs and related superstitions, along with his interest in Shiite rituals and ceremonies.
Thierry Zarcone, Directeur de recherche, Groupe Sociétés, Religions, Laïcités, CNRS, France.
https://www.amazon.com/Qajar-Shiite-Material-Culture-Religious/dp/0999480111?ref_=ast_sto_dp
This book is the first of its kind to use photographs of the Qajar period to prove the level of ability of the medium to document and simultaneously pathologise the history, culture, story, and maybe struggle of African slave communities in Qajar Iran.
https://www.amazon.com/Qajar-African-Nannies-Aristocratic-Studies/dp/0999480103?ref_=ast_sto_dp
با زحمات بیدریغ همکار گرامی سرکار خانم فاطمه معزی و دوستان نشر اطراف این کتاب کم نظیر بزودی در دسترس محققان و دوستداران تاریخ قاجار قرار خواهد گرفت.
وعده ما غرفه نشر اطراف - نمایشگاه بین المللی کتاب تهران (۱۹-۲۹ اردیبهشت)
Following two years of collaboration, our new book will be available for the 35th Tehran International Book Fair (8-18 May 2024). Of Joy & Sorrow (working title) is a compilation of the unpublished travelogues of Doustali-Khan Moayer al-Mamalek and Mirza Hassan Khan Mostowfi al-Mamlek while accompanying Mozaffar al-Din Shah Qajar, the King of Persia, during his second journey to Europe to attend the 1900 Paris Expo.
Moezzi, Fatemeh and Khosronejad, Pedram 2024 Of Joy & Sorrow. Tehran: Atraf
https://vimeo.com/414956130
Unveiling the Veiled:
Amir Doust Mohammad’s Camera Erotica
A Book by Pedram Khosronejad
Visual Studies of Modern Iran (4)
Cover Design: Kourosh Beigpour
September 2020
"Qajar Shiite Material Culture: From the Court of Naser al-Din Shah to Popular Religious Paintings", by Pedram Khosronejad.
Time Museum, Tehran.
Wednesday April 24th, 10:00-12:00.
Open to the public.
مکان: دانشگاه اصفهان ومجموعه فرهنگی تخت فولاد
زمان: 7 -13 اردیبهشت 1398
تماس:
safavidstudies@gmail.com
9131072378
Janet Afary
Mellichamp Professor of Religious Studies
UC Santa Barbara
Pedram Khosronejad has provided invaluable new information about the history of photography in Iran during the 19th-century Qajar period. In particular he has carefully researched the photographs taken by Naser al-Din Shah, perhaps the Qajar monarch most fascinated by Western technology. These intimate photographs of his own harem are unique and highly informative, not just for their intrinsic value in a period in which human images were disapproved of, but also for what they reveal about Naser al-Din Shah, his self-image, his household and his court.
William O. Beeman
Professor, Department of Anthropology
University of Minnesota
Khosronejad’s observations further confirm Naser al-Din Shah’s deep-rooted connections to popular Shiite beliefs and related superstitions, along with his interest in Shiite rituals and ceremonies.
Thierry Zarcone, Directeur de recherche, Groupe Sociétés, Religions, Laïcités, CNRS, France.
Symposia Persica | Photo Exhibition (Feb. 22-23)
Organizer and Curator: Dr. P. Khosronejad
The Qajar Lens: Diversity in Qajar Photography
Selection of photographs from: Aqa Reza Eqbal Al-Saltaneh, Amir Qajar, Abdollah Qajar, Antoin Sevruguin, and Luigi Montabone.
Suite 201 | School of Global Studies & Partnerships | Wes Watkins Centre | Oklahoma State University
Contact : Dr. P. Khosronejad, Associate Director for Iranian and Persian Gulf Studies
historical documentation of events, individuals and contexts were captured in these photographs. How should we read the histories recorded in such images and imaging practices? What kind of historical knowledge might they provide?
Can they provide historians and other scholars of the field with historical ‘traces’ that bear witness to things not put into words?
Keywords: Qajar Iran, Qajar photography, African slavery, photography of
African slavery
Visual Studies of Modern Iran NO.1
Qajar African Nannies: African Slaves and Aristocratic Babies
By
Pedram Khosronejad
Hardback (74pp, 19 full color ill.)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 0999480103
Product Dimensions: 8 x 0.3 x 8 inches
Design: Kourosh Beigpour & Pedram Khosronejad
https://www.amazon.com/Qajar-African-Nannies-Slaves-Aristocratic/dp/0999480103/ref=sr_1_2?ie=UTF8&qid=1509149995&sr=8-2&keywords=pedram+khosronejad
Interview with "Iran" News Paper, published today.
گفتوگو با «پدرام خسرونژاد»؛ مدیر گروه ایرانشناسی و مطالعات خلیج فارس دانشگاه ایالتی اوکلاهما در امریکا
به دنبال جذب ایرانیان به نوپاترین نهاد ایرانشناسی جهان
Vol 3, No 2
Chief Editor,
Pedram Khosronejad
Table of Contents
http://acmejournal.org/index.php/acme/issue/view/7
Articles
--------
Fluid identifications and persistent inequalities: Social boundary making
among Iranians in Hamburg
Sonja Moghaddari
A breadwinner or a housewife? Agency in the everyday image of the Georgian
woman
Natallia Paulovich
20 Fingers: Personal or political?
Sussan Siavoshi
Book Reviews
--------
REVIEW - Brennan, James R. Taifa: Making Nation and Race in Urban Tanzania.
292 pp. Athens, Ohio: Ohio University Press, 2012.
Katrina Daly Thompson
REVIEW- Contandini, Anna and Claire Norton (eds.). The Renaissance and the
Ottoman World. xiv + 303 pp. Surrey: Ashgate Publishing Limited, 2013.
Ülkü Ü. Bates
REVIEW - Leaman, Oliver. Controversies in Contemporary Islam. 230 pp. New
York: Routledge, 2014.
Abdessamad Belhaj
REVIEW - Najmabadi, Afsaneh. Professing Selves: Transsexuality and Same-Sex
Desire in Contemporary Iran. xii + 418 pp. Durham and London: Duke
University Press, 2014.
Mehran Rezaei
REVIEW - Schwanitz, Wolfgang G. Islam in Europa, Revolten im Mittelost:
Islamismus und Genozid von Wilhelm II und Enver Pascha über Hitler und
al-Husaini bis Arafat, Usama Bin Ladin und Ahmadinejad sowie Gespräche mit
Bernard Lewis, xii+784 pp. Berlin: tr
Lionel Gossman
Film Reviews
--------
REVIEW - Cinema Palestine. Dir. Tim Schwab. 79 mns. Arabic with English
subs. 2013.
Peter S. Allen
REVIEW - Face Patterns. Dir. Hadi Afarideh. 34 mns. Persian with English
subs. Documentary & Experimental Film Centre (DEFC), 2012.
Dido Tetley
REVIEW- Himself He Cooks. Dirs. Valérie Berteau, Philippe Witjes. 65 mns.
Polymorfilms, 2012.
Véronique Davis
REVIEW - I comme Iran – I for Iran. Dir. Sanaz Azari. 50 mns. Persian with
French subs. CVP, 2014.
Valentina Gamberi
REVIEW - In the Name of the Innovator of the Times and the Places. Dir.
Mahmoud Rahmani. 25 mns. 2006. Recognition (Sheasayi). Dir. Ephraim
Asgharzadeh. 3 mns. 2001. In the Name of God. The Independent Group of Ahwaz
Filmmakers. 19 mns. 2006.
Peter S. Allen
REVIEW - Lalaei e Jang (Lullaby of War). Dir. Habib Bavi Sajed. 18 mns.
Persian and Arabic with Persian subs. Documentary group of IRTV (Sima 1),
2012.
Mazyar Lotfalian
Index
--------
Index to Volume 3
Dr. Pedram Khosronejad
Chief Editor, Anthropology of the Contemporary Middle East and Central Eurasia, SeanKingston.
Many detainees soon chose to remain in Australia after the war, becoming permanent residents, contributing to the diversified technology and culture of the country.
While in the camps, some recorded daily life by means of artwork. For the first time, many of the original artworks works are celebrated, described and made available here on this online platform.
http://www.australianinternment.art/index.html
Naser al-Din Shah and His Collaborators Inside the Royal Harem"
By Pedram Khosronejad
The full text and information related to the photographs of this contribution are available in :Pedram Khosronejad, Royal Lens: Naser al-Din Shah’s Photography of his Harem (Visual Studies of Modern Iran, No. 3, 2018)
https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/099948012X/ref=dbs_a_def_rwt_bibl_vppi_i5
https://vimeo.com/199320111
http://www.theguardian.com/world/iran-blog/2016/jan/14/african-slavery-in-qajar-iran-in-photos)
Since the 1990s I have focused on the study of the Bakhtiari sacred landscape which includes: lion tombstones and their environment, cemeteries, saints’ shrines and other sacred and pilgrimages sites, and also the relationship between pastoral nomads and their sacred and mortuary landscape. In addition I am also interested in other Bakhtiari mortuary traditions such as funeral ceremonies, related songs and lamentations, oral traditions and sacred material culture.
مسلمانان در رسانهھا ادامه دارد. روزنامۀ فيگارو به اين مناسبت با يک مردمشناس ايرانی گفتگويی مفصل دارد که در زمينۀ
تصويرگری در اسلام و پيشينۀ بازنمايی پيامبر در ھنر اسلامی و ايرانی پژوھش کرده است.
A talk by Dr. Pedram Khosronejad
Moderator: Dr. Fataneh Mahmoudi
Mazandaran University, Iran.
December 19, 2020.
Direct link to the talk (in Persian):
http://webinar.umz.ac.ir/art
سخنران : دکتر پدرام خسرونژاد
یکشنبه ۱۶ آذر ماه ۱۰-۱۲ صبح.
Talk by Dr Pedram Khosronejad
Iconography and Visual Representations of the Prophet Mohammad in Iranian Visual Arts
Iranian Research Week
Department of Islamic Art
University of Art
Tehran, Iran
The talk will be followed by a Q&A with Pedram Khosronejad, moderated by Jacqui Strecker.
DATE AND TIME
Thu. 3 December 2020
5:00 pm – 6:30 pm AEDT
https://www.goethe.de/ins/au/en/sta/syd/ver.cfm?fuseaction=events.detail&event_id=22031664&fbclid=IwAR2YjmCCOhvWB1HW-5xvt95TVvVMOSG0jz2N7F8LLNsK5XY-9tt52OU13Zw
سلسله نشست های همایش بین المللی پیامد های اجتماعی و فرهنگی کرونا بر حوزه های میراث فرهنگی گردشگری و
صنایع فرهنگی خلاق و هنرهای سنتی
سخنرانان:
پدرام خسرو نژاد استاد دانشگاه سیدنی غربی
حسین میرزایی عضو هیئت علمی دانشگاه علامه طباطبایی
علیرضا حسن زاده عضو هیئت علمی پژوهشگاه میراث فرهنگی و گردشگری و دبیر علمی همایش
Pilgrimage Traditions and the Coronavirus Pandemic
(This event will be in Persian)
Panellists:
Pedram Khosronejad, Professor at Western Sydney University
Hossein Mirzaei, Faculty Member of Allameh Tabataba'i University
Alireza Hassanzadeh Faculty Member of Anthropological Research Center
Department of Anthropology, Australian National University
Date & time
Mon 19 Oct 2020, 3–4pm
In this talk, Ms Helga (Girschik) Griffin and myself will talk about the life story of German civilians who moved to Persia (Iran) during 1930s for the development of country, then captured by the British army on Iranian soil during the Second World War, and then sent to Australian war camps as war internees. By using interdisciplinary research methods, we want to begin an academic discussion on the childhood memories of these internees. This will include the use of family photographs in prompting and reconstructing the traumas and challenges they faced by enforced displacement and separation, and in their resettlement in Australia. This talk rests on the collaboration between a socio-cultural, visual anthropologist and a former Second World War internee who is an author and has trained in history. During the last year we have worked on the interaction between family photographs, material culture of Iran, childhood memories, the war camps internment experiences and postwar settlement. We aim to bring the collaborative result of our work to our audiences, demonstrating also how the development of friendship between anthropologists and their protagonists can lead to mutually humane interaction, catharsis and healing.
سخنران: پدرام خسرونژاد
استاد وپژوهشگر دانشگاه سیدنی شرقی
اندیشگاه سازمان اسناد و کتابخانه ملی ایران
دوشنبه 24 شهریور ماه 1399 ساعت 17
Talk by Dr. Pedram Khosronejad
Department of Anthropology
Macquarie University, Sydney
Time: September 9th, 2020
11-12:30
This seminar discusses the roles that ‘migrant visual mementos’ as tangible heritage play in the visualization of personally relevant data (intangible heritage) for the purposes of oral history, including reminiscing about childhood memory, separation and war trauma. Since 2019, Prof. Khosronejad has led a reciprocal anthropology project in Australia, focusing on the German civilians of Persia who, during the 1930s, moved to Iran for the development of the infrastructure of the country, and were then captured by the British army on Iranian soil and sent to Australian war camps as war internees.
This talk is grounded in collaborative work between a socio-cultural and visual anthropologist and the children of the German civilians of Persia who have been living in Australia since the 1940s.
We aim to bring the results of our work to our audiences as a collaborative project, in which friendship and collaboration between anthropologists and their protagonists can produce fruitful results.
Civil German Prisoners of Persia in Australian Second World War Prisons
Autobiographical Remembering: Dynamics of Interplay between Memory, Self and Material/ Visual/ Culture
Digital Humanities research Group, Western Sydney University
Wednesday 22 April 2020, 10.30-12.00 (zoom talk)
Recorded talk: https://vimeo.com/410840110
Uncovering Dr. H. E. Wulff Collection: A Life Contribution to the Study of Persia and Iranian Studies
A talk by
Dr. Pedram Khosronejad
Religion and Society Research Cluster
School of Social Sciences
Western Sydney University, Australia
Friday, February 28, 2020
12 - 1:30pm
In this lecture, Pedram Khosronejad will present the life and researches conducted by Dr. H. E. Wulff (1907-67) in Iran 1930-60 and the importance of his archive and collection for the study of the traditional craft, art, technology and science of Persia. Then he will examine the importance of Dr. Wulff’s collection to the study of German internees of the WWII. The lecture is addressed to all who are interested in the history of craft and technology, German Internees of the WWII, archival studies.
In the occasion of this event, some of the archival materials will be on display at the event.
Dr. P. Khosronejad is an Adjunct Professor at Religion and, Society Research Cluster at Western Sydney University, Australia and a Fellow at the Department of Anthropology at Harvard University. His publications include Women’s Rituals and Ceremonies in Shiite Iran and Muslim Communities: Methodological and theological challenges, 2015, Berlin-Münster-Wien-Zürich-London: LIT Verlag.
University of Southern California, VKC Library Multi Media Room.
Co-Hosted By: USC Libraries and Dornsife Middle East Studies Department
R.S.V.P. by Tuesday February 25th (bahavar@usc.edu)
Light lunch will be served.
AFRICAN SLAVES THROUGH QAJAR PHOTO ALBUMS:
Visual Representations of Race and Gender in Persia (1850's-1920's)
Dr. Pedram Khosronejad
Religion and Society Research Cluster
School of Social Sciences
Western Sydney University, Australia
Chair: Prof. Mary Elaine Hegland
Tuesday, February 25
5:30 - 6:30 pm
Williman Room, Benson Center
Light Refreshments
The study of Iranian photo-history is still in its infancy and began only in the late 1970s. While Western scholars focused on the contributions of European photographers in Iran and on issues of Orientalism, Iranian scholars, eager to document indigenous contributions, published evidence based on the rare collections of photographic albums of the Qajar period (1789 to 1925). Neither of these two groups of researchers have shown any particular interest in visual representations of the enslaved in general, and African slaves in particular. Even among historians of Iran, the topic of slaves (bardeh) and slavery (bardeh dari), especially African slavery, is a non-developed topic.
The intensifying international conflicts over slavery and black freedom played out through competing campaigns of photographic imagery. Defenders of Western slavery primarily employed photography to illustrate and advance their arguments that blacks were less than human, with limited ability, stunted morality and an overall incapacity for freedom. Proponents of slavery and its bedrock ideology of black inferiority used these images to reinforce existing paradigms of racial difference and legitimate the ownership of black people as property.
Generally speaking, photographs of enslaved people defy easy categorisation because they are both the record and a relic of the brutal racism and domination at the core of chattel slavery. Photographs of enslaved children, women and men provide compelling and haunting documentation of individuals otherwise lost to the written historical record. Yet the history of such photographs is firmly embedded in the dynamic of exploitation and dehumanisation that lay at the core of slavery.
In this talk with the help of interdisciplinary research methods and based on my innovative archival research, I will talk about the importance of family photo albums for the study of African slavery in Persia.
German Internees of WWII in Persian and
Their Contributions to the Development of Iranian Studies
Dr. Pedram Khosronejad
Religion and Society Research Cluster
School of Social Sciences
Western Sydney University, Australia
February 26
Parlors B/C Benson
5:30 - 6:30 pm
Light refreshments
After WWI, with the period of great depression in Europe and also with the infrastructure development projects of Reza Shah (1878-1944), the King of Iran (r.1925-1941), between 1930 and 1941 many talented young German engineers moved to Iran for the construction of the royal railroad, bridges, and roads. In this regard, between 700 and 2000 Germans lived in Iran with their families and children during this period. Many of their children were even born in Iran and were given Persian names and ID cards.
However, with the outbreak of WWII, things changed dramatically. The British and Soviet armies invaded Iran in 1941 and interned most of the Germans there (between 500 and 700) under the accusation of being spies of the Third Reich and working in Iran as Nazi associates. About 500 German internees in Iran were captured by the British Army.
During the last six months I have found the children of the German internees of Iran. I am working on their entire oral history of their stay in Iran, during the War period, after the War and during their resettlement and their impressions of Iran during that period. I am working with around twenty of these children. The main part of the project focuses on their fathers who lived in Iran and helped in the development of the country and also contributed to the arts, crafts, technology and science of country.
In this talk, first I will give a historical background of the above-mentioned events and then will continue with a very special case study of one of the German internees on Iran, Dr. Hans Eberhard Wulff (1907-1967), the author of Traditional Crafts of Persia.
In this talk, the audience will be introduced to Nasser al-Din Shah Qajar as one of the main patrons of Iranian Shiite rituals, in his own way a deep believer and true servant of the Prophet Mohammad, Imam Ali, and Hoseyn ibn-Ali. Nasser al-Din Shah was one of the first photographers of Iran who strongly supported the development of this visual art inside his court.
One of his many innovations in the domain of photography is his engagement in the development of the "technique du faire croire" through photography. As the main patron of photography in Iran, he encouraged his own court photographers to take photographs of Shiite saints’ shrines inside and outside Iran, of Shiite rituals and related material religion, and of visual representations of portraits of the Prophet Mohammad and Imam Ali all around the world. In this context, I argue that Nasser al-Din Shah used photography for the reproduction of images with Shiite subjects for further virtual devotional practices.
https://vimeo.com/244871668
Saturday 18
10:30 – 12:15
In this talk, based on McQuire’s theories regarding operational archives, I would like to discuss how changes in the conditions of re-production, circulation and finally storage of digital version of photographs -of African slaves in Qajar Iran- in the form of an online repository (online open access digital platforms) will offer new possibilities for deploying visual images as socio-cultural and politico-historical resources.
Lapidus Center Inaugural Conference
“Reckoning With Slavery: New Directions in the History, Memory, Legacy, and Popular Representations of Enslavement”, November 16-18 at the Schomburg Center, The New York Public Library.
Paramilitary Bassidji during the Iran-Iraq War (1980-88)
Based on long-term fieldwork, interviews conducted with high-ranking officers of the Army of the Guardians of the Islamic Revolution and also former voluntary paramilitary Bassidji in Iran, for the first time the speaker will present and examine Khunnameh- fraternity blood-signed letters of paramilitary Bassidji written directly before their voluntary martyrdom on the fronts- an unknown element of the sacred material culture of the Sacred Defence and Imposed War. Rare to find or to gain access to, these sacred letters are one of the most challenging topics of Iran-Iraq War martyrdom.
This talk will be completed with a projection of a documentary film about paramilitary Bassidji: their feelings, manners and ideology twenty years after the end of the Iran-Iraq War (2009) in the capital of Iran, Tehran, and also on the former warfronts where they spend their national and religious holidays in the memory of that war’s fallen martyrs.
10:40 AM – 12:15 PM
First Ever Digital Photo-Archive of African Slavery in Iran and its Importance for the Field of African Slavery (1840s-1960s)
Reckoning With Slavery:
New Directions in the History, Memory, Legacy, and Popular Representations of Enslavement
By
Dr. Pedram Khosronejad, Associate Director for Iranian and Persian Gulf Studies (School of International Studies/School of Media& Strategic Communications, Oklahoma State University)
Introduction: Dr. Manoutchehr Eskandari-Qajar, Santa Barbara City College
Moderator: Dr. Janet Afary, University of California, Santa Barbara
With special thanks to: M. Abdamin, M.R. Behzadi, F. Diba, R. Farasati, A. Ghasemkhan, F. Ghaziha, Sh. Ghadiriyan, K. Najafzadeh, H. Sarshar, M.R. Tahmasbpour.
This link is password protected and you need to contact Dr. P. Khosronejad to get access (pedram.khosronejad@okstate.edu)
https://vimeo.com/240714771
Speaker: Dr. Pedram Khosronejad, Oklahoma State University
Thursday October 19, 1:30-2:45
Introduction: Dr. Manoutchehr Eskandari-Qajar, Santa Barbara City College
Moderator: Dr. Janet Afary, University of California, Santa Barbara
On the left side on the bottom it should say
Sponsored by: Middle East Studies Program, SBCC Dept. of Anthropology, SBCC Phi Theta Kappa Honor Society, SBCC Chapter
In cooperation with The Iranian Studies Initiative, UCSB The Department of Religious Studies, Center for Middle East Studies, UCSB and the Suzanne and Duncan Mellichamp Funds
Dr. Ali Fazel "Visual Archive, Media Collection and Digital Resources", Iranian and Persian Gulf Studies (IPGS), Oklahoma State University
Place: UCSB, Humanities and Social Sciences Building, Room HSSB 3041
(Oklahoma State University, 2016-2019)
Including Curriculum Design, Teaching, Academic Conferences and Seminars, the Exhibition’s curatorial, and engagement with stakeholders, and communities
PEDRAM KHOSRONEJAD
FARZANEH FAMILY CHAIR
&
ASSOCIATE DIRECTOR FOR IRANIAN AND
PERSIAN GULF STUDIES
January 2016 -July 2019
Shiism, Death and Funerary Material Religion
cemeteries, tombstones and burial ceremonies
Safavid Studies Center, University of Isfahan
Isfahan, Iran, April- May 2019
Anthropology of Visual Propaganda: Iran-US Relations since the 1979 Iranian Revolution
Images have always served as powerful propaganda tools during conflicts.
Images are the most effective means for capturing the attention of the public and crystalizing their sentiments. Studies have also shown that visual images have a significant influence on people’s perceptions of cultures and countries other than their own.
This course will investigate how images (photographs, films, illustrations) have been used as powerful propaganda tools by Iran and the United States since the 1979 Iranian Revolution. Students will study how visual framing of Iran-U.S. conflicts influences viewers’ emotional responses and evaluations of communicative quality.
This course will examine the role of material culture and visual media in anthropological studies of climate change and the Anthropocene. During the semester, students will investigate the importance of film footage, photographs, museum objects and archival documents collected by foreign scientists (geologists, geographers, botanists, anthropologists, ethnographers) since 1920 to study the role of the oil industry on the Anthropocene transformation, the Great Acceleration and consequently the changes in the lives of pastoral nomads of Western and South western Iran.
ART 4800
Photography and Anthropology
Dr Pedram Khosronejad
Bartlett Ctr for Studio Arts 305
In the field of social science including anthropology, scholars serve photographs for many purposes: as their primary data, illustrations of their researches and evidences of fieldwork in a book, documentation for disappearing Western and non-Western societies and their cultures, and material objects for museum exhibitions. This module is intended as an in-depth look at resonances between photography and anthropology. In examining the use of visual methods within the discipline, the course will focus on both historical and contemporary examples of ethnographic photography. In this module our main interest is mostly the popular filed of visual anthropology by focusing on theoretical and practical aspects related to photography in social and cultural research. In this course we take photography (the visual) as both technique of representation and mode of knowing, looking at ways of seeing cultural, social and historical context mostly in non-Western societies. We will discuss the different ways in which societies and their people can be represented photographically and socio-cultural interpretations of such visual representations. We also address important and critical issues in this field of research and practice such as knowledge production, ethical issues, and aesthetic in the process of image making. Therefore, we will explore several topics surrounding the usage of photography:
- How do photography and anthropology share techniques of rendering people, places, and things?
- How anthropologists use photography as part of their visual research methodology and also study it ethnographically?
- The usage of images of non-Western and indigenous people among Western cultures;
- The role of sensation, reflection, and creativity in depicting a scene, as well as care and ethics;
- Visibility and invisibility in photography with anthropological topics;
- Critical awareness of photographic uses in anthropology, its authenticity, and propaganda methods.
• The impact of the Iranian Revolution and the Iran-Iraq War on the establishment of the Islamic Republic of Iran;
• The function and propagation of Shiite martyrdom in Iran;
• The role of youth in political, social and cultural movements.
• What meanings does this material religion hold for Shia devotees in modern Iran?
• Why and how do the above devotees use visual piety that reflects and secures their beliefs?
• What is the role for anthropology in this field if, for anthropologists, as for sociologists, art is to be viewed essentially as a social product?
The conference will examine the history of internees and prisoners of war in two World Wars and in global contexts, with particular emphasis on the social and intellectual history of knowledge production related to internment. Contributors will examine the following questions, among others: In what sense were camps also spaces, laboratories and microcosms of knowledge formation? What was the legal framework of internment? What forms of knowledge transmission between internees and external actors emerged in these specific contexts? How do histories of internment connect to broader political and cultural histories of empire, dictatorships, wars, or transnational political movements in the period? What were the effects of the techniques and technologies of detention on the internees, and what are their implications for historians of internment? This conference builds on an earlier online workshop 'Camps as Microcosms of Knowledge Production. Aspects of the Cultural Legacies of Two World Wars', which took place on 4-5 April 2022. Organised by Dina Gusejnova (LSE), Marina Pérez de Arcos (LSE and Oxford) and Arnd Bauerkämper (Freie Universität Berlin), the conference is accompanied by a special exhibition on 'Internment in South Africa during the First World War' with 'Virtual Reality Experience' will accompany the conference.
https://www.pedramkhosronejad.com/the-art-and-material-culture
Persian Shiite Photography: Visual Pilgrimage, Prophetic Devotion and Sacred Admiration
University of Manchester (August 5th-August 10th, 2013)
V07
Representing the non-representable: visual representations of extraordinary beings in ethnographic films
https://www.pedramkhosronejad.com/representing-non-representable
Convenor: Dr. P. Khosronejad
Anthropologists have long struggled with the problem of how best to conceptualize and account for the observable diversity of religious belief and practice in various societies.Also recently there has been interest among ethnographic filmmakers who survey healing and spirit possession rituals, exorcism ceremonies or religious gatherings among which supernatural forces (djinns, demons and spirits) are the main topic of the ceremonies. The aim of this panel is to investigate and discuss how such non-representable supernatural beings could be studied and captured visually and ethnographically via documentary films.
The Institut du Pluralisme Religieux et de l’Athéisme (IPRA ; www.ipra.eu)
Nantes, 17-19 June 2019
Slavery and Sexual Labor in the Middle East and North Africa
In Memory of Ahmad Ali Gramian (1956-2018)
October 19th-20th, 2018
UC Santa Barbara, California, United States
CALL FOR PAPER AND ARTWORK PROPOSALS
Art, Materiality and Representation
BRITISH MUSEUM/SOAS 1st-3rd JUNE 2018
The invention of photography as Lalvani brings (1996: 2) “is a crucial moment in the development of a modern structure of vision and is both constructive of and constituted by a modern ocular paradigm; its operations are dependent on the larger ocular and cultural formation within which it is deployed, its investment-effect constituted by a particular ensemble of discourses and practices, and specific forms of subject-object relations.” Indeed, in legitimizing specific forms of subject-object relations, technologies of vison like photography, embedded within particular discursive knowledge, power and the body (Foucault 1979). Therefore, in order to understand photography’s relation with the body, in modern period, we must not only examine the discourses and practices within which photography operated at different levels of the social formation to produce specific bodies, but the ocular epistemology within which these practices are constituted, shaped, and given meaning (Lalvani: ibid).
As Peirce (2009) discussed in her pioneering contribution the academic scholarship regarding histories of sexuality “in the region that we term the Middle East” was ignored till recently. When it comes to the study of photography of/and sexuality in the Middle East and Central Eurasia (topics such as: erotic photography and pornography, sexual photographs of harems and indoors of aristocrats, photography of prostitutes and brothels, etc.) the number of academic contributions in view point of anthropology of art, visual anthropology, material culture and museum studies come to zero.
Therefore, this panel invites broad range of scholars and artists who are dealing with photography and sexuality in the greater Middle East and Central Eurasia during the modern and contemporary periods.
The topics may include (but not limited to):
- The visual order of sexual photography;
- Aesthetics of intimacy;
- Western technology, local beauty and indigenous aesthetic;
- Vernacular photography as a challenge to Orientalism;
- Colonial photography and indigenous creativity;
- Influence of European migrants and refugees on vernacular pornography;
- From brothel to studio, from studio to brothel;
- Photography as an object of desire;
- Traditional vision and modern bodies;
- Censorship, sexuality and creativity;
- Islam, the body and nude photography;
- Museums and censorship;
- The position of museums and galleries in collaboration with artists;
- Western photographs and local albums.
Please be in touch with Dr. P. Khosronejad (pedram.khosronejad@okstate.edu) to discuss your proposal in advance before official opening of call for papers.
ROYAL ANTHROPOLOGICAL INSTITUTE, THE DEPARTMENT OF AFRICA, OCEANIA AND THE AMERICAS OF THE BRITISH MUSEUM AND THE DEPARTMENT OF ANTHROPOLOGY AT SOAS
- Call for papers opens on 29 August 2017 and closes on 8 January 2018
- Registration opens on 22 February 2018
Conference Fee:
Non-Fellow: £190
RAI Member: £170
RAI Fellow: £95
Concessions: £80
RAI Student Fellow: £60
https://www.therai.org.uk/conferences/art-materiality-and-representation
Iranian and Persian Gulf Studies (IPGS), Oklahoma State University
Visual Representations of Iran: Conference, Film Season, Photographic exhibition (Dept. of
Social Anthropology, University of St Andrews, 13-16 June 2008) remains one of the major
programs regarding Visual Studies of post-revolutionary Iran in the West. This program received
financial support from the Wenner-Gren Foundation (U.S.A.), Parsa Community Foundation
(U.S.A.), Centro Incontri Umani (Switzerland), the Houtan Scholarship Foundation (U.S.A.), the
Royal Anthropological Institute (U.K.), the Iran Society (U.K.), and the Iran Heritage
Foundation (U.K.).
Keynote Speakers:
Prof. P. I. Crawford
Dr. R. Husmann
Prof. Hamid Naficy
Full access to presentations:
https://www.iranian-persiangulf.org/visual-representations-…
Fajouriyeh, An Exceptional Persian Pornographic Manuscript of Qajar-Era Iran
For being published in:
Journal of the Anthropology of Contemporary Middle East and Central Eurasia
Special Issue, Summer 2020
Beauty and the Beast: Photography, Body and Sexual Discourse in the Middle East
Dr. P. Khosronejad, Dec. 2019. For being published in:
Journal of the Anthropology of Contemporary Middle East and Central Eurasia
Special Issue, Spring 2020
The Portrait of Prophets and Saints of Islam: Prophetic Images, Sacred Portraitures, and Visual Devotion.
(1) An Album of Artists' Drawings from Qajar Iran, Roxburgh, D. (ed.), New Haven: Yale University Press, 2017 ISBN- 10: 0300229186, 244 pp. $ 50
(2) Technologies of the Image: Art in 19th-Century Iran, McWilliams, M. and Roxburgh, D. (eds.), New Haven: Yale University Press, 2017, ISBN- 10: 0300229194, 174 pp. $ 42
(3) A Collector's Passion: Ezzet Malek Soudavar and Persian Lacquer, Farhad, M., McWilliams, M. and Retting, S, Cambridge: Harvard Art Museums, 2017, ISBN-10: 0934686416, 176 pp. $ 30
Reviewed by Pedram Khosronejad/ Mirzai, Behnaz A.
While historical research regarding the Iranian Persian Gulf and its people, especially Afro-Iranians, remains in its early stages, documentary filmmakers have demonstrated greater interest in this topic. Generally speaking, such documentary films are self-financed and have mostly been made by those who have a special interest in one of the many ethnographical topics of these regions of Iran. The majority of such films have been made by professional documentary filmmakers (rather than researchers) in search of historical and archaeological evidence of the Iranian Persian Gulf.
Topic
Religious Healing and Sacred Health Curing: Online Documentary Film Program and Debate (week 6)
Description
Please join our fifth biweekly webinar (19 September 2020), documentary film presentation and debate organized by the Network of the Anthropology of the Middle East and Central Eurasia of EASA in collaboration with the Religion and Society Research Cluster, Western Sydney University.
Introduction to the session by Dr. P. Khosronejad (Western Sydney University), debate by Dr. Natasha Fijn (Australian National University) researcher and director, discussants Prof. Geoffrey Samuel (University of Sydney) and Dr Natalie Kohle (Hong Kong Baptist University).
Film presentation
Two Seasons: multispecies medicine in Mongolia
Natasha Fijn, 2018, 62 minutes, Mongolia.
Synopsis
This multispecies-based observational film engages with Mongolian herders’ medicinal knowledge and perceptions in relation to other species. The documentary was filmed within three separate homelands (or nutag) in spring and again in autumn. The film follows different protagonists: Ganbaa travels with the filmmaker to reconnect with his extended family and friends, Nara lives in a herding encampment during the warmer months, while herding couple Bor and Bombog remain herding in the valley they grew up in. The film conveys how medicinal knowledge is actively passed on through forms of mentorship and everyday application within their extended kinship networks. In spring the herders’ focus is on the birth of newborn animals and boosting immunity. In autumn the focus is on collecting medicinal herbs from the mountainsides, while preparing hay for the long winter months.
After the film, a debate with the presence of the filmmaker.
A link will be provided to all participants after the introduction debates to watch the film online or via screen sharing through the moderator’s screen.
This webinar will be held on Zoom.
Time
September 19, 2020 10:00 AM London
Registration
https://uws.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_EYp8aMrITau_eme38ksEJw
Topic
Religious Healing and Sacred Health Curing: Online Documentary Film Program and Debate (week 5)
Description
Please join our fifth biweekly webinar (5 September 2020), documentary film presentation and debate organized by the Network of the Anthropology of the Middle East and Central Eurasia of EASA in collaboration with the Religion and Society Research Cluster, Western Sydney University.
Introduction to the session by Dr. P. Khosronejad (Western Sydney University), debate by Dr. Arik Moran (University of Haifa) researcher and co-director, and discussant Dr. Elena Mucciarelli (University of Groningen).
Film presentation
CHIDRA
Nadav Harel and Arik Moran, 2018, 40 minutes, Israel.
Synopsis
CHIDRA (from Sanskrit, "pierced" or "cut") is an outcome of ongoing collaboration between documentary filmmaker Nadav Harel (Noprocess Films) and ethnohistorian Arik Moran. The documentary follows Ram Nath as he leaves his fields and buffaloes to play the part of human sacrifice in a mysterious religious festival called "Kahika" in the Himalayan Valley of Kullu, North India. During the ritual, Ram Nath transforms from a highland peasant into the master of ceremonies, a powerful redeemer who cuts holes (chidra) in the fabric of society, collecting sins into a cosmic trap that only he can operate. CHIDRA follows Ram Nath through the ritual, revealing how men, gods, and mediums handle the dangerous substance of actions (karma) at the frontier of the Hindu cultural sphere.
After the film, a debate with the presence of the filmmaker.
A link will be provided to all participants after the introduction debates to watch the film online or via screen sharing through the moderator’s screen.
This webinar will be held on Zoom.
Time
September 5, 2020 10:00 AM London
Registration
https://uws.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_S4qYK8uHR6OjSQDIt6CE7Q
Introduction to the session by Dr. P. Khosronejad (Western Sydney University), debate by Dr. Mike Poltorak (University of Kent) researcher and filmmaker.
Film presentation
The Healer and the Psychiatrist
Mike Poltorak, 2019, 74 minutes, UK/ Switzerland.
Synopsis
On the South Pacific Island group of Vava’u, the traditional healer Emeline Lolohea treats people affected by spirits. One day away by ferry, the only Tongan Psychiatrist Dr Mapa Puloka has established a public psychiatry well known across the region. Though they have never met in person, this film creates a dialogue between them on the nature of mental illness and spiritual affliction. Their commitment and transformative communication offers challenges and opportunities to help address the growing global mental health crisis.
After the film, a debate with the presence of the filmmaker.
A link will be provided to all participants after the introduction debates to watch the film online or via screen sharing through the moderator’s screen.
This webinar will be held on Zoom.
Time
August 22, 2020 10:00 AM London
Registration
https://uws.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_VAlWdekiQBWi_H4WGDv9_Q
Introduction to the program by Dr. P. Khosronejad (Western Sydney University), debate by researcher and filmmaker Dr. Christian Suhr (Aarhus University), and discussant Dr. Paola Esposito (University of Oxford).
Film presentation:
Descending with Angels
Christian Suhr, 2013, 75 minutes, Denmark.
Synopsis
Islamic exorcism or psychotropic medication? ”Descending with Angels” explores two highly different solutions to the same problem: namely Danish Muslims who are possessed by invisible spirits, called jinn.
A Palestinian refugee living in the city of Aarhus has been committed to psychiatric treatment after a severe case of jinn possession which caused him to destroy the interior of a mosque, crash several cars, and insult a number of people. He sees no point in psychotropic medication since his illness has already been treated with Quranic incantations. A psychiatrist and nurse try to understand his point of view but find that even further medication is needed. In the meantime a local imam battles a stubborn jinn-spirit of Iraqi origin and tries to explain the Muslims of Aarhus that they should stop worrying so much about jinn, magic, and other mundane affairs since nothing can harm anyone except by the permission of God.
The film compares two systems of treatment that despite vast differences both share a view of healing as operating through submission of faith to an external non-human agency — namely God or psychotropic medicine.
After the film, a debate with the presence of the filmmaker.
This webinar will be held on Zoom.
To register please visit:
https://uws.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_6XcISVSiTHSZpMl8n0jUGw
Introduction to the program by Dr. P. Khosronejad (Western Sydney University), and debate by filmmaker Dr. R. Canals (University of Barcelona), researcher of film Dr. R. Sarró (University of Oxford) and discussant Dr. R. Blanes (University of Gothenburg).
Introduction to the program by Dr. P. Khosronejad (Western Sydney University), and debate by Dr. R. Canals (University of Barcelona), Dr. J. Lindsay (John Cabot University), Dr. M. Poltorak (University of Kent), Dr. C. Suhr (Aarhus University).
During our current complex situation caused by COVID-19, this program should be considered a unique platform for specialists of the field in which they will be able to watch collectively documentary films which in one way or another discuss the role of religion, religious rituals, sacred sites and material religion in religious healing and sacred health curing. The film presentations will be continued by a debate between the moderator, filmmakers and the specialists of the field.
Research, camera and sound: Pedram Khosronejad
Director: Pedram Khosronejad
2004, 25 mins, DVD, Color
Narration in French by Jean-Claude Carriere
Postproduction: CNRS-Image
This ethnographic essay is a try to show funeral ceremonies of Bakhtiyari pastoral nomads in south-west Iran. This documentary was part of my PhD researches in École des Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales (EHESS) in Paris (2001-2007).
For field researches and postproduction of this film I received generious supports of:
Houtan Scholarship Foundation, Soudavar Memorial Foundation, Roshan Cultural Heritage Institute , The Barakat Trust, Iran Cultural Heritage Organization and Institute of Nomadism in Iran.
This film was produced by academic supports of UMR 7528 - Mondes Iranien et Indien, my research laboratory during all period of my PhD.
Festival participation
2004 (Oct.) The Last Lion of the Bakhtiari, Bakhtiari Death Rituals. ‘Regards Comparés:
Nomadisme, Rituels, Musique, Musée de l’Homme’, Paris, France
2003 (July) The Last Lion of the Bakhtiari, Bakhtiari Death Rituals. ‘Eighth RAI
International Festival of Ethnographical Film: Islamic Worlds’, Durham,
U.K.
2003 (May) The Last Lion of the Bakhtiari, Bakhtiari Death Rituals. ‘Eighth Festival du
Film de Chercheur’, Nancy, France.
https://vimeo.com/44974664
Date: 2014
Running time: 70'
Director: Pedram Khosronejad
Camera: Marie Chevais, Pedram Khosronejad,
Editing: Sepideh Abtahi
Synopsis:
This documentary is about lion tombstones among the Bakhtiari nomads. In the majority of cases it was seasonal stonemasons who mostly made lion tombstones for the Bakhtiari. From their childhood, seasonal stonemasons traveled with their fathers, thus learning the trade at first hand. Generally, they were neither Lor nor Bakhtiari: they were city-dwellers, living in towns around the Bakhtiari territories, such as Hafshejan, Shahr-e Kord, and Khansar. The presence of these stonemasons in the Bakhtiari territories permitted the latter to learn their techniques, either by observing the stonemasons or by helping them. Over the course of time, the lives of these stonemasons have changed greatly, and indeed the Bakhtiari’s new way of life does not permit them to continue their traditional existence. The progressive settling of the Bakhtiari means they now lead a more modern way of life, in which there is no longer a need for seasonal stonemasons. This film is about the relationship of these seasonal stonemasons and the Bakhtiari regarding the production of lion tombstones.
https://vimeo.com/60553037
Date: 2014
Running time: 70'
Director: Pedram Khosronejad
Camera: Marie Chevais, Pedram Khosronejad,
Editing: Sepideh Abtahi
Synopsis:
This documentary is about lion tombstones among the Bakhtiari nomads. In the majority of cases it was seasonal stonemasons who mostly made lion tombstones for the Bakhtiari. From their childhood, seasonal stonemasons traveled with their fathers, thus learning the trade at first hand. Generally, they were neither Lor nor Bakhtiari: they were city-dwellers, living in towns around the Bakhtiari territories, such as Hafshejan, Shahr-e Kord, and Khansar. The presence of these stonemasons in the Bakhtiari territories permitted the latter to learn their techniques, either by observing the stonemasons or by helping them. Over the course of time, the lives of these stonemasons have changed greatly, and indeed the Bakhtiari’s new way of life does not permit them to continue their traditional existence. The progressive settling of the Bakhtiari means they now lead a more modern way of life, in which there is no longer a need for seasonal stonemasons. This film is about the relationship of these seasonal stonemasons and the Bakhtiari regarding the production of lion tombstones.
https://vimeo.com/60553037
Volumes 5 & 6, Summer 2017 – Winter 2018/19
Special Issue
Beauty and the Beast: Photography, Body and Sexual Discourse in the Middle East
Editor – Pedram Khosronejad
Contents
Articles
Between the abstraction of miniatures and the literalism of photography: Amateur erotica in early twentieth-century Turkey
İrvİn Cemİl Schick
King’s camera erotica: Naser al-Din Shah and his collaborators inside the royal harem
Pedram Khosronejad
Queering archives of photography: Imperialism, homoeroticism and desire in Middle Eastern contemporary art
Andrew Gayed
Performing critique: Chaza Charafeddine’s Divine Comedy as an inter-temporal dialogue on gender and sexual diversity
Charlotte Bank
Erotic images and imagery in the early Qajar period: A study in projection, adaptation, adoption and appropriation
Manoutchehr Eskandari-Qajar
Research Notes
Eroticism and nudity in Iranian photography: From royal harem to the red-light districts (a century of visual review)
Pedram Khosronejad
Dust `Ali Khan ‘Mo`ayyer al-Mamalek’: Scion of a once powerful family; witness to the end of an era
Manoutchehr M. Eskandari-Qajar
Fajouriyeh, an exceptional Persian pornographic manuscript of Qajar-era Iran
Pedram Khosronejad
Unveiling the veiled: royal consorts, slaves and prostitutes in Qajar photographs: An exhibition at the McCune Library, UC Santa Barbara
Pedram Khosronejad and Manoutchehr M. Eskandari-Qajar
Special Issue, Spring 2020
The Portrait of Prophets and Saints of Islam: Prophetic Images, Sacred Portraitures, and Visual Devotion
Edited by Pedram Khosronejad and Thierry Zarcone
Introduction
Pedram Khosronejad (Western Sydney University)
Thierry Zarcone (GSRL Groupe Sociétés Religions Laïcités, CNRS, France)
Veneration of Saints and Holy Portraits in Shi‘a-Sunni Contexts
Pierre-Jean Luizard (GSRL, Groupe Sociétés Religions Laïcités, CNRS, France)
Portraits of Prophets and Saints in the Twelver Shia Cult of Pilgrimage
Ingvild Flaskerud (Faculty of Theology, University of Oslo, Norway)
Devotional Portraitures of Prophet Mohammad and Imam Ali during the Nasseri Period (1848-96)
Pedram Khosronejad
The Seven Sleepers (Ashāb al-Kahf): From Portraits to Talismans
Thierry Zarcone
A Survey of the Ottoman Dervish Lodge Calligraphic Panel as Islamic Mystical Tradition
Hümeyra Uludağ (Independent Scholar)
Persian Shiite Photography and Prophetic Portraitures: A Century Survey
Pedram Khosronejad
Reports from the Field
Interview with Reza Mirkarimi and Kambuzia Partovi Screenwriters of “Muhammad: The Messenger of God” by Majid Majidi
Pedram Khosronejad
Film Review
Prophet Mohammad and Shiite Saints in Iranian Cinema
Pedram Khosronejad
Book Review
https://www.iranian-persiangulf.org/journal
Symposium & Exhibition
Barmera, SA. March 4 – 5, 2023
Convener of Symposium and Curator of Exhibition
Professor Pedram Khosronejad
School of Social Science, Western Sydney University
Symposium & Exhibition
Barmera, SA. March 4 – 5, 2023
Convener of Symposium and Curator of Exhibition
Professor Pedram Khosronejad
School of Social Science, Western Sydney University
Until today, the lives and fates of those 512 German civilians of Persia (Iran), the imprisoned inhabitants of Australian World War II confinement centres, and the roles that they and their family members (600 wives and children) played in the development of post-war Australia have not been the subject of any academic research.
It was during August 2019 that I met some of the “children” of the German expatriate colony of Persia (Iran), Australians who had been detained with their parents in Iran in 1941 after the country’s invasion by the British and Soviet Armies during World War II. 512 of them (single males and six families with their children) were sent to Australian internment camps, while the rest of the women and children were forced to separate from their husbands and return to Germany during the war. In 1947, after the war, some of these internees were deported or repatriated to Germany while many were able to stay in Australia, although they had to find employment in order to finance the passage of their families to join them. It was only from 1949 that most of the women and children were able to rejoin their husbands and continue to live together in Australia.
Our research project, should be considered the first multidisciplinary academic attempt at the recollection of the socio-cultural history and memories of this special group of civilian German detainees and migrants of Australia through their family heritage and the roles that they played in the development of the country after World War II.
Our Symposium and Exhibit investigate the role of intangible (e.g. childhood memories and autobiographies) and tangible (e.g. family photo albums, personal diaries, letters, and arts of the camp) heritage in the life and resettlement of German civil internees and prisoners of war from Persia in post-war Australia.
The exhibition examines how objects inspired by traditional arts and crafts were used in Persian society, focusing on seven themes: Joy and Happiness; Purification and Cleansing; Spirituality and Devotion; Poetry and Calligraphy; Rituals and Performance; Patronage and Craftsmanship; Nature and Design. Iranzamin encompasses a diversity of materials and techniques, including hand-woven crafts, carpets and rugs; arms and armour; glass, ceramics and tiles; textiles, embroidery and foundry.
Iranzamin examines how the influence of Persia, situated between two major trade routes – the Silk Road and the Indian Ocean – spread out into the world. Special attention is paid to the influence of Persian culture on non-Iranian craftsmen and artists such as Australian painter and textile designer Florence Broadhurst. This includes original Broadhurst wallpaper prints titled Persian Phoenix (Simorgh), Persian Birds, and Persian Pomegranates and Flowers.
Curator Professor Pedram KHosronejad
Sydney’s first Persian-owned carpet business was founded in 1952 by recent immigrant Jacques Cadry (1910–2003), who had been born into a Jewish family in the trade. For 70-years, Cadrys Rugs has been at the forefront of introducing Australian designers and artists, including Florence Broadhurst, to the unique craftsmanship of Persian rugs.
Curator Professor Pedram Khosronejad
Sydney’s first Persian-owned carpet business was founded in 1952 by recent immigrant Jacques Cadry (1910–2003), who had been born into a Jewish family in the trade. For 70-years, Cadrys Rugs has been at the forefront of introducing Australian designers and artists, including Florence Broadhurst, to the unique craftsmanship of Persian rugs.
Curator Professor Pedram Khosronejad
In addition to their beauty, many of the textiles featured in the exhibition incorporate spinning, weaving, dyeing and embroidery techniques. Highlights include block-printed textiles, known as Fustat fragments, believed to be made in Gujarat in the 1400s.
Charkha and Kargha is presented by Powerhouse Museum with the support of the Consulate General of India in Sydney. The exhibition is curated by Professor Pedram Khosronejad.
https://maas.museum/event/iranzamin/
PHOTOGRAPHY
A PHOTO EXHIBITION (https://vimeo.com/412176424)
Curator and Organiser:
Dr. P. Khosronejad
MARCH 26 - MAY 4, 2018
Iranian and Persian Gulf Studies, Oklahoma State University
With the Support of Dr. A. Fazel
Prof. Roy Dilley (Head of Department of Social Anthropology, University of St. Andrews)
Dr. Pedram Khosronejad (Department of Social Anthropology and Research Fellow in The Institute for Iranian Studies, University of St. Andrews).
13-16 June 2008 (conference and film season), 5-18 June 2008 (exhibition)
University of St. Andrews, St. Andrews, Fife, Scotland.
A conference, film season and photographic exhibition that aim to interpret and theorise visual representations of Iran in ethnographic, documentary and feature films, as well as other visual art forms.
Presented by
The Department of Social Anthropology, the Institute for Iranian Studies and the Centre for Film Studies of the University of St. Andrews and the Iran Heritage Foundation
with the support of:
Centro Incontri Umani, Documentary & Experimental Film Center, Documentary Filmmakers Society, Farabi Cinema Foundation, Houtan Scholarship Foundation, Iran Cultural Heritage Organisation, Iranian Young Cinema Society, Bank Julius Baer, Ravayat-e Fath Institute, Visual Media Institute, Young Filmmaker House.
Summary
In recent years, there has been a steady growth in, and global recognition of, the innovative qualities of Iranian cinema and visual arts. Yet, at the same time, Iran occupies an ambiguous place in the imagination of the West. As a field of academic inquiry, contemporary Visual Anthropology opens up a range of possibilities for examining the ambiguities that surround the imaginations and representations of Iran. Drawing from the broad spectrum of theoretical approaches that span the poetics and practice of filmmaking, photography as well as the art and politics of representation, Visual Anthropology poses a series of questions that may be the basis for dialogue and debate over images of Iran between scholars from a variety of disciplines. A four day programme will investigate these issues within the context of a conference, a film season and a photographic exhibition (the exhibition will remain on view after the conclusion of the four day programme).
Sateen Art Magazine, winter 2020, 02, pp. 48-59.
UNSW Library, Sydney, Australia
https://vimeo.com/378401840
Curated by Dr Pedram Khosronejad (Western Sydney University), this exhibition traces the unexplored history of
African slaves in Iran during the Qajar dynasty and looks at the unique relationship between photography and slavery
in Iran from 1840s to the 1930s.
The photographs in this exhibition are drawn from government and personal archives throughout Iran, Spain, the United
Kingdom and the United States. Photography, Race and Slavery: African Sitters of Qajar Era Iran is the first exhibition
organized in Australia that traces the history of African enslaved in Iran using photographs of the Qajar (1796-1925)
and early Pahlavi periods (1925-1979).
This exhibition is presented as part of the UNSW Library Exhibitions Program and the Silk Roads @ UNSW Research
Network Seminar Series in collaboration with the Religion and Society Cluster of Western Sydney University.
27-29 Nov. 2019, Reid Library, The Circle, The University of Western Australia, Perth.
The photographs in this exhibition are drawn from government and personal archives throughout Iran, Spain, the United Kingdom and the United States. Photography, Race and Slavery: African Sitters of Qajar Era Iran is the first exhibition organized in Australia that traces the history of African enslaved in Iran using photographs of the Qajar (1796-1925) and early Pahlavi periods (1925-1979).
It was during August 2019 that Professor Pedram Khosronejad
(Western Sydney University) met in Australia some of the children
of the civilian Germans of Persia (Iran), whose parents had been
detained in 1941 after that country’s invasion by the British and Soviet
armies during the Second World War and sent to Australian internment
prison camps.
Since 2019 we have been engaged together in a reciprocal project.
Our collaborative study is intended to shed light on the history of
those 512 innocent victims of the Second World War, who became
detainees in Australian Internment Prison Camps.
This research project should be considered as the first multi-disciplinary
academic attempt to record, describe and analyse the socio-
cultural recollections of this special group of German detainees
from Persia, and migrants to Australia that are associated with this
group. We are investigating their family heritage and their contributions
in Australia post war.
Our research project investigates the role of intangible heritage
(childhood memories and autobiographies) and tangible heritage
(family photo albums, personal diaries and written memories, arts
and artefacts from the camps) and what role they played in the life
and resettlement in Australia of the civilian German internees and
prisoners of war from Persia.
Ten of those one-time German victims from Persia are resting in the
German War Cemetery of Tatura.
We dedicate this work to them.
Pedram Khosronejad
November 2023
Shireen Taweel has undertaken an arts residency at Sydney’s Powerhouse Museum, researching designing and creating works that cross the boundaries of space, time, culture and belief.
Shireen discusses with curator Professor Pedram Khosronejad the challenges and satisfaction derived from investigating the power not only underlying the construction and discoveries of science, but also of the power of connecting science, art and culture.
In conversation with Professor Pedram Khosronejad, Claire and Sean reference Florence's subsequent Asian ‘inspired’ wallpaper designs, and have painted tributes upon beer and wine cardboard packaging. This combination of the exotic and the mundane brings together her experiences of different aesthetic cultures with the realities of working back in a rural pub in Australia.
Her practice, including her highly regarded work with paper cutouts, has engaged with shadows as an ephemeral motif symbolising the movement of cultures and people. Recently too, Sangeeta’s work has involved the dying of large flowing fabric panels, with a particular focus on the nature and message of colours, particularly INDIGO
Professor Pedram Khosronejad spoke to Sangeeta via Zoom, and asked her about the nature of her work, the strong international influences, and the manner by which curators, gallerists and artists work together.
Information about Sangeeta's work acquired by the Museum of Contemporary Art here:
https://www.mca.com.au/artists-works/artists/sangeeta-sandrasegar/
While there - for two years - to help ease the anxiety of his situation, he put his skills and inspiration to work. Majid noticed discarded material in the refuse area of the Centre which he knew he could re-purpose into usable things.
Majid Rabet made many other things to make his life, and the lives of his fellow detainees easier and more comfortable. Good friend of this podcast Pedram Khosronejad (Adjunct Professor at the School of Social Sciences at Western Sydney University) spoke to Majid at a recent exhibition, and asked about his journey, his work, and his plans for the future.
Majid's work acquired by the Powerhouse in Sydney is available to view here:
https://collection.maas.museum/set/8217
Within its great ethnical diversity, religious plurality, and cultural differences, the Iranian society considers the wedding ritual and its related ceremonies and customs as one of the most important pillars of Persian culture. Iranian families within Iran and in the Diaspora celebrate the weddings of their loved ones with great joy and happiness.
The preparation of a traditional wedding may begin a year in advance with great joy. During this period, parents and family members of the bride and groom work closely together on all parts of the planning and preparation, such as the dowry list and bridal gifts, the wedding spread, and the wedding dress.
This talk will provides a highlight of cultural insight through fascinating visual art and material culture of the Iranian wedding since the reign of Naser al-Din Shah Qajar (r. 1848-1896).
Zoom link:
https://us02web.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_Y95u9JJ8SjeEUI1yyz8GLA
Interview of Delphine Minoui with Dr. Pedram Khosronejad.
In 1947, many of them were deported to Germany while many could stay in Australia, although they had to find employment in order to make enough money to pay for the return of their families (wives and children). It was only in 1949 that most of the women and children were able to rejoin their husbands and continue to live in Australia.
This project concerns their life stories.
With the outbreak of COVID-19, pilgrims and devotees of sacred places, governmental institutions and their health sectors, and also religious leaders and clerics are challenged. Each is endeavouring to be reasonable and resolve several key issues of the effect of COVID-19 on pilgrimage to the sacred sites, questions such as caution about the health of pilgrims and the provision of related guidance and manuals; bodies, touch and the transference of disease; the importance of purity and the miracles of saints, their relics and shrines for healing COVID-19 and other health problems.
This is a unique time for anthropologists and other social scientists to observe the behaviour of the entire society (pilgrims, governmental sectors and also religious authorities) regarding the pilgrimage of devotees to saints' shrines and sacred pilgrimage sites based on COVID-19. This is a call for participation in general observation and the sharing of knowledge in this regard among all faiths around the globe. Those who are interested can share their observations and experiences on this FB page:
https://www.facebook.com/groups/206400057252459/
Doheny Memorial Library
University of Southern California
Monday February 24th, 16:00-18:00
Convenor: Dr. Pedram Khosronejad, Western Sydney University
Welcome Greeting
• By Farhang Foundation (Dr. Haleh Emrani) and USC Library & Ramzi Rouighi (Deparetment of Middle East Studies)
• Dr. P. Khosronejad, Curator of exhibition and organiser of workshop
Shahla Bahavar (University of Southern California, USA)
Introduction to the USC Persian and Iranian Library Collection
Manoutchehr Eskandari-Qajar (Santa Barbara City College, USA)
Wedding Ceremonies at the Court of the Early Qajar Shahs
Hani Khafipourr (University of Southern California, USA)
Weddings in Safavid Iran as Seen by European Visitors
Amir Hosein Pourjavady (University of California, Los Angeles)
Music in Persian Weddings in the late Qajar Period
Pedram Khosronejad (Western Sydney University, Australia)
The Importance of Persian Wedding Photographs and Material Culture in Preservation of Family History
This exceptional talk should be considered one of the first interdisciplinary academic scholarships regarding Iranian traditional weddings and related ceremonies. Initiated by the Farhang Foundation, USC Libraries, and USC Dornsife Department of Middle East Studies, this event is part of the “AROOSI, 150 Years of Iranian Wedding Traditions” exhibition which will be held from February 24th to May 31st, 2020 at USC Doheny Library.
During this program, four specialists of Iran (historian, ethnomusicologist and social anthropologist) will discuss different historical, socio-cultural and performative aspects of the rich tradition of Iranian weddings during Qajar-era Iran (1796-1925).
Based on historical narratives from the autobiographies of Qajar rulers and foreign travellers, and also through the examination of the art objects and material culture of this important period in the history of Iran, speakers try to open new windows and present their fresh research findings with their audience.
Participating in this unique program will provide a great understanding for those who are interested in advancing their knowledge regarding Iranian culture and place the art objects and material culture used in the exhibition into their historical, social and cultural context.
A talk by Dr. Pedram Khosronejad
Faculty of World Studies
University of Tehran, Tehran.
Monday April 22nd 2019, 13:30-14:30.
Migrants which will be held in the Department of Politics and International Relations at
Swansea University, in the United Kingdom from July 8‐13, 2019 (the precise day will be
announced later).
Hoda Afshar: A Curve is a Broken Line
Art Gallery of New South Wales
2 September 2023 – 21 January 2024
"...A Curve is a Broken Line is Afshar’s notable mid-career exhibition. Through this retrospective, she has established herself as the most important social-justice artist of Iran and one of Australia’s most influential artistic voices. Afshar involves the viewer in the ethics of witnessing..."
مجله کرگدن، شماره 108، بهمن،1397، ص 124-127
عروسی امیردوست محمد معیر الممالک و فاطمه خانم عصمت الدوله
On the wedding ceremony of Amir Doust Mohammad Moayer al-Mamalek and Fatehmeh Khanom Esmat al-Dowleh
Baq-e Ferdows: Historical Background, Contemporary Iranian History, 20. No. 79-80 (Autumn- winter 1395), pp. 240-271.
خسرونژاد، پدرام , معزی، فاطمه
باغ فردوس از دیرزمان شکوفایی، فصلنامه تاریخ معاصر ایران، سال بیست، پاییز و زمستان 1395 (2019)، ص. 240-271.
Interdisciplinary Masterclass on:
Ali ibn-Musa al-Reza’s Sacred Mortuary Complex:
Shiite Pilgrimage, Devotional Practices, and Religious Healing
18-24 April 2020- Mashhad, Iran
Conveners:
Majid Fouladiyan (Assistant Professor of Sociology, Department of Sociology, Ferdowsi University, Mashhad, Iran)
Pedram Khosronejad (Adjunct Professor, Religion and Society Research Cluster, Western Sydney University, Australia)
Ali ibn-Musa al-Reza’s shrine and its related mortuary complex have been used for centuries by devotees as one of the most important healing sites of the Muslim world. Although pilgrimage to Imam Reza’s shrine should be considered as one of the oldest religious rituals in Shiite Iran, it remains and continues its vibrant movement in the twenty-first century. Pilgrims to this sacred site have and combine different traditional and modern motivations, but most importantly seeking healing for physical disease or spiritual issues. The existence of a huge number of national and international pilgrims to the city of Mashhad for the visitation of this holy Shiite saint’s shrine is testimony to the power that Imam Reza continues to hold for those devotees who undertake these sacred journeys.
In this masterclass, for the first time, through the use of anthropological and interdisciplinary research methods, we aim to examine different and persistent forms of Persian Shiite rituals and practices to expand our understanding of the role of Imam Reza and his holy shrine in the traditional and modern practices of Ziyarat (physical and digital). By focusing on the different dimensions of pilgrimage to the shrine of the eighth Shiite Imam, we aim to perform selected case studies grounded in different research methods to help participants to understand the many ways in which pilgrimage provides help and support to the pilgrims.
During the seven-day program (30 h) participants will be introduced to:
- The history of the martyrdom of Imam Reza and the establishment of his shrine,
- The importance of Imam Reza’s shrine and related sacred sites in the construction of a holy Shiite site,
- Methodologies for studying Imam Reza’s shrine from different aspects of Shiite doctrine,
- The importance of pilgrimage to Imam Reza’s shrine and its social, cultural and political influence at the personal, local, national, and international levels,
- Rituals and ceremonies related to Imam Reza’s shrine and its sacred and religious sites.
The entire masterclass will be organized under the governance of the Ferdowsi University of Mashhad and will primarily be held in the shrine of Imam Reza and its research institute.
Complementary to the theory classes and fieldwork will be the private visitation of the research institute, library and archive of Imam Reza’s shrine (Astan-e Qods), visitation of other saints’ shrines and cemeteries of Mashhad and neighbouring cities for further comparative studies.
Participants:
This program is only open to university-based scholars, registered students, and official researchers.
Visa:
The Ferdowsi University will issue an official invitation for all participants, who should apply for their own visas individually. The Ferdowsi University has no responsibility in this regard and cannot guarantee the result of related applications.
Accommodation:
For the duration of the masterclass, all participants will stay in the hotel booked by the Ferdowsi University.
The registration fee (including: program fee, accommodation, food, and transportation for the duration of the masterclass)
- Registered students: $ 600
- University scholars and researchers: $ 1000
* The registration fee should be paid in cash during the first day of arrival at the university campus.
Deadline for preliminary registration:
15th January 2020.
For further enquiries, to complete your preliminary registration and reserve your place, please contact Dr. P. Khosronejad (P.Khosronjead@westernsydney.edu.au).
The Study of Islam and Muslim Societies
School of Social Sciences and Psychology
Western Sydney University
Parramatta South Campus
2 October 2019
Convenor and Organiser
Dr. Pedram Khosronejad
(Religion and Society Research Cluster, Western Sydney University)
Open to the public
Venus:
8am - 12pm: Building EB, Level 3, Room 21 (Collaborative Learning Space)
12pm - 5:30pm: Building EB, Level 3 Room 18 (Collaborative Learning Space)