From here.
Intensive Course on Christian Arabic
Princeton, New Jersey (USA) May 11-15, 2015
Princeton, New Jersey (USA) May 11-15, 2015
Thanks to a number of generous grants
from the David A. Gardner ’69 Magic Project, over the last few years the
Near Eastern Studies Department at Princeton University has organized a
series of short, intensive courses for graduate students on a variety
of subjects in the broad field of Islamic studies not normally covered
in the Princeton curriculum. In each case, an internationally-recognized
expert has been brought in to teach the course over a period of five
weekdays.
This year, we plan to offer such a course on Christian Arabic.
The course will take place in May,
starting on Monday May 11, and ending on Friday, May 15, 2015. The
course is intended primarily for graduate students, both from Princeton
and from other universities; applicants should have some knowledge
of medieval Middle Eastern history.
The instructor will be Alexander
Treiger of Dalhousie University, an expert on Christian Arabic
literature, Sufism, and medieval Arabic philosophy. The course will
focus on Christian literature in Arabic, with emphasis on the
Arabic-speaking Chalcedonian Christians (called “Melkites” or “Rum”).
The first part (Days 1-2) will offer a general survey of Middle Eastern
Christianity, its ecclesiastical, ethnic, and linguistic divisions, and
Christian Arabic Studies as a field of research, central to the study of
the Christian Orient and highly pertinent to neighboring fields (Late
Antiquity, Syriac Studies, Islamic Studies, Byzantine Studies, etc.).
Particular attention will be given to the library of the Monastery of
St. Catherine on Mount Sinai – arguably the richest repository of Arab
Christian manuscripts in the world, at least as far as Melkite material
is concerned. A special session will therefore be devoted to dated
manuscript colophons from the Sinai collection. The second part of the
course (Days 3-5) will focus on select genres of Christian literature in
Arabic: biblical and patristic translations, apologetic and polemical
literature, and world chronicles. Select texts will be read in printed
editions (whenever available) and in manuscripts.
Application process and deadlines
Applications must be emailed to Judy Schedneck (jschedne@princeton.edu)
at the Near Eastern Studies Department at Princeton University by
February 19, 2015. The subject line of the email should read,
“Application for Christian Arabic Workshop.” Applications should
comprise the following:
Letter of application with statement of interest
CV
Names, positions, and email addresses of two referees
All items should be included in a single attachment, which may be a pdf.
Successful applicants will be notified
in early-to-mid March 2015 and students accepted for the course but
coming from outside of Princeton will receive partial scholarships to
help defray travel and accommodation costs. The course itself is free.
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