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X-WR-CALNAME;VALUE=TEXT:Locusts of Power
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SUMMARY:Locusts of Power
DESCRIPTION:<p>	<span><span><span><span style="color:#1d1d1d">The CMES Environmental Studies of the Middle East Speaker Series is pleased to present </span></span></span></span><span><span><span style="color:#1d1d1d"><span>“Locusts of Power”</span><span>with </span><span>Samuel Dolbee, </span><span>Assistant Professor of History; Family Dean's Faculty Fellow in Studies of the Middle East, Vanderbilt University</span></span></span></span><!--break--></p><p>	<span><span><span><span style="color:#1d1d1d">The CMES Environmental Studies of the Middle East Speaker Series is pleased to present </span></span></span></span><span><span><span style="color:#1d1d1d"><span>“Locusts of Power”</span><span>with </span><span>Samuel Dolbee, </span><span>Assistant Professor of History; Family Dean's Faculty Fellow in Studies of the Middle East, Vanderbilt University</span><br><br><span>Samuel Dolbee, Assistant Professor, Vanderbilt University, is an environmental historian of the Ottoman Empire and the modern Middle East, with interests in agriculture, disease, and science. He teaches courses in the Department of History and as part of the Climate Studies major.</span><br><br><span>His first book from Cambridge University Press is entitled “Locusts of Power: Borders, Empire, and Environment in the Modern Middle East” (June 2023). The book offers a new account of the end of the Ottoman Empire and the emergence of the states of Iraq, Syria, and Turkey grounded in the ecology of the Jazira region, its mobile people, and distinctive locusts. It unearths what borders meant in the lives of not only locusts but also Arab and Kurdish nomads, Armenian deportees, and Assyrian refugees. His next project is an environmental history of the microbe in the late Ottoman Empire. It is concerned at once with new treatments and spatial controls established against ailments like phylloxera, rabies, and rinderpest—which devastated the empire’s grape vines, street dogs, and cattle—as well as the way the language of germs infected the language of politics in the empire’s final years.</span></span></span></span><br><span><span><span style="color:#1d1d1d"><span>Dolbee’s scholarship has appeared in the “American Historical Review, Past &amp; Present”, and “International Journal of Middle East Studies”. He has also contributed chapters to edited volumes on the history of food and disease, respectively. He is the editor in chief of Ottoman History Podcast.</span><br><br><span>Prior to coming to Vanderbilt, Dolbee was a lecturer on History &amp; Literature at Harvard. He previously held postdoctoral fellowships at Yale’s Program in Agrarian Studies, Harvard’s Mahindra Humanities Center, and Brandeis University’s Crown Center for Middle East Studies. Dolbee completed his PhD at New York University in the joint program in History and Middle Eastern &amp; Islamic Studies, and has an MA in Arab Studies from Georgetown University and a BA in History and International Studies from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.</span><br><br>More information can be found at the </span></span></span><a href="https://cmes.fas.harvard.edu/event/locusts-power" title="">event page</a><span><span><span style="color:#1d1d1d">. </span><br><br><span style="color:#1d1d1d"><span>Contact: </span></span></span></span><a href="mailto:elizabethflanagan@fas.harvard.edu">Liz Flanagan</a></p>
LOCATION:CMES, Rm 102, 38 Kirkland St, Cambridge
STATUS:CONFIRMED
DTSTART:20231129T230000Z
DTEND:20231130T003000Z
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