When:
Wednesday, October 30, 2024
3:00 PM - 5:30 PM CT
Where: 1800 Sherman Avenue, 3029 (Event Space), Evanston, IL 60201 map it
Audience: Faculty/Staff - Student - Public - Post Docs/Docs - Graduate Students
Contact:
Nancy Hickey
(847) 467-1507
Group: Anthropology Department
Co-Sponsor:
Alice Kaplan Institute for the Humanities
Buffett Institute for Global Affairs
Middle East and North African Studies
Keyman Modern Turkish Studies (Northwestern Buffett)
Anthropology Colloquia and Events
Category: Academic, Lectures & Meetings
Please join us for the book launch event for Zainab's Traffic: Moving Saints, Selves, and Others across Borders. Emrah Yıldız (Anthropology & MENA Studies) will read from Zainab's Traffic, followed by a three-way conversation with Alireza Doostdar (University of Chicago) and Angie Heo (University of Chicago) about the book. Upon a Q&A with the audience, a reception will follow.
Zainab’s Traffic: Moving Saints, Selves, and Others across Borders
What is the value—religious, political, economic, or altogether social—of getting on a bus in Tehran to embark on an eight-hundred-mile journey across two international borders to the Sayyida Zainab shrine outside Damascus? Under what material conditions can such values be established, reassessed, or transgressed, and by whom? Zainab’s Traffic provides answers to these questions alongside the socially embedded—and spatially generative—encounters of ritual, mobility, desire, genealogy, and patronage along the route. Whether it is through the study of the spatial politics of saint veneration in Islam, analysis of cross-border gold trade and sanctions, or examination of pilgrims women’s desire for Syrian lingerie accompanying their pleas with the saint in marital matters, the book and this talk develops the idea of visitation as a ritual of mobility across geography, history, and category. Iranian visitors’ experiences on the road to Sayyida Zainab—emerging out of a self-described “poverty of mobility”—demonstrate the utility of a more capacious anthropological understanding of ritual than our current predicaments allow for. Rather than thinking of ritual as a scripturally canonized manual for pious self-cultivation, Zainab’s Traffic approaches ziyarat as a traffic of pilgrims, goods, and ideas across Iran, Turkey, and Syria.