Event

Sertaç Sehikoglu: Decolonization and Ibn Khaldun

Tuesday, November 7, 2023 17:00to19:00
Morrice Hall 328, 3485 rue McTavish, Montreal, QC, H3A 0E1, CA
Poster with event details and historical photo.

The Old Women of Nishapur: an Initiative on Gender, Knowledge and Religion,

together with The Institute of Islamic Studies and The Department of Anthropology at McGill

Invite you to a talk by

Sertaç Sehlikoglu (UCL)

Genealogy, Critique, and Decolonization: Ibn Khaldun and Moving Beyond Filling the Gaps"

TUESDAY, November 7, 5-7pm Morrice Hall, Room 328.

The aim of this talk is to locate critique at the intersections of the genealogy of knowledge in anthropological thinking and decolonizing movements. The paper approaches the decolonizing movement as one of the most crucial points in anthropological thinking, as it can go beyond filling the gaps in genealogies by engaging with non-Eurocentric scholarship and, additionally, by carrying the critical angles to the ways it engages with those non-Eurocentric scholarships. To illustrate, it uses the case of Ibn Khaldun, an Arab scholar of social sciences and historical analysis from the 14th Century - who is often referred to as the first sociologist. On the one hand, his influence on classical Western thinking is largely dismissed. On the other hand, as a counter-response to this dismissal, the new Islamic revivalist intelligentsia in the Muslim right engages with him in a selective manner that rejects that central critical thinking and, even worse, sanctions the local regimes of power, including that local canon. By locating his scholarship to multiple tropes in anthropological theory and reading his evolutionist thinking vis-à-vis the post-colonial literature in anthropology and sociology, I question the limits and possibilities of critical thinking within and beyond the decolonizing movement.

Dr Sertaç Sehlikoglu is a social anthropologist and an associate professor at University College London’s Institute of Global Prosperity. Her work focuses on intangible aspects of human subjectivity that enable humans to change and transform social life. She is the recipient of a European Research Council (ERC) Starting Grant (2019), the author of “Working Our Desire: Women, Sport and Self-Making in Istanbul” (2021) and the co-editor of several journal issues, including “The Everyday Makings of Heteronormativity: Cross-Cultural Explorations of Sex, Gender and Sexuality” (2020). She is also the editor of the Journal of Middle East Women’s Studies’ Reviews Section.

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