About the Lecture:
This talk demonstrates how bringing a cultural anthropology lens to contemporary visual art illuminates the relationship between large-scale regional conflict, economic globalization, urban change, and gender roles. Recent changes in Amman’s cultural scene, such as the proliferating cafes and galleries in Jabal al-Weibdeh, are best understood in relation to the violent conflict and refugee flows in the whole Middle East region, along with the implementation of neoliberal development policies. At the same time, a striking feature of the boom in Amman’s arts and culture is that most projects involve women at their center, who thus are influencing transformations in the city’s landscape and culture in unprecedented ways. I explain how my project draws on various strands of anthropology, especially urban anthropology and the anthropology of art, to examine the convergence of these processes—war, economics, urban development, and gender roles—in the rapidly expanding art scene in Amman.
About the Lecturer:
Dr. Aseel Sawalha is a professor of anthropology at Fordham University in New York City and ACOR’s 2016-2017 NEH Fellow, supported by the National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH). Her research project is titled “Amman’s Art Scene and the Changing Urban Landscape.” This autumn she will build on earlier research and interviews with artists, gallery owners and art collectors in Amman. Her research explores several dimensions of Amman’s developing and vibrant art and culture sector as well as the social and economic impact of art culture on the surrounding communities. Dr. Sawalha’s research intersects urban anthropology, Middle East studies, and gender studies.
Aseel Sawalha earned a B.A. in English Literature (1987) and an M.A. in Anthropology (1991) from Yarmouk University in Irbid, Jordan. She earned a Ph.D. in Cultural Anthropology from the City University of New York (2002). Please visit her Fordham faculty page or visit her ACOR scholar page to learn more.
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