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James Clark
University of Nebraska Omaha
Occupation
Assistant Professor
Contact
Department of History
287 Arts and Sciences Hall The University of Nebraska at Omaha
Omaha NE 68182-0213
United States
ABOUT
James D. Clark is a historian and scholar of the Middle East and Central Asia. His area of specialization is modern Iran. Several of his articles and books have been published. His annotated translation of The Travel Diary of Ebrahim Beg by Zayn ol-Abedin Maraghe’i and his history of the Iranian province of Azerbaijan entitled Provincial Concerns: A History of the Iranian province of Azerbaijan, 1848-1906 appeared in 2006. His annotated translation of The Rapture (Khalseh) by the 19th century Iranian historian Mirza Hasan Khan E‘temad os-Saltaneh has been accepted for publication by the University of Texas Press. He is now working on a history of the Kurdish revolt in Iranian Azerbaijan in 1880, and a history of the province of Azerbaijan during the Iranian Constitutional Revolution (1905-12). He has taught at the University of Nebraska Lincoln, the University of Texas at Austin, the University of Nebraska Omaha, Peru State College, Khojand State University, and Tehran University. The subjects of his courses include American history, world history, Islam, the Middle East, global studies, and Iran. During the 1990s he traveled to Khojand, Tajikistan several times on behalf of the University of Nebraska. In 1994, he resided in Skopje, Macedonia as the representative of the Management Department of UNL. Since 2000 he has been the Overseas Director for the American Institute of Iranian Studies (AIIrS). From 2001 to 2006 he was also the director of the Tehran Project whereby he resided in Iran and supervised American doctoral students, promoted cooperation with Iranian institutions and academics, and worked with the University of Tehran, the International Center for Persian Studies (ICPS), and the Dehkhoda Institute. From 2007 to 2012 he was the Program and Site Director of the Critical Language Scholarship (CLS) summer intensive language program for Persian and Tajiki-Persian in Dushanbe, Tajikistan. He currently teaches courses on world history, the modern Middle East history, the US and the Middle East, modern Iran, modern Russia, and Israel and Palestine at the University of Nebraska at Omaha, in Omaha, Nebraska.
Discipline
History
Sub Areas
19th-21st Centuries
Central Asian Studies
Iranian Studies
Middle East/Near East Studies
Persian
World History
Geographic Areas of Interest
Azerbaijan
Central Asia
Former Soviet Union
Iran
Tajikistan
Specialties
Reform And Revolution In Iran And The Middle East.
Social Thought In Iran, The Middle East, And Centr
The Cold War In Iran And The Middle East.
Languages
Arabic (intermediate)
Azeri (elementary)
German (advanced)
Persian (fluent)
Russian (elementary)
Education
PhD | 1999 | History | The University of Texas at Austin
MA | 1990 | African and Oriental Languages | The University of Texas at Austin
BA | 1982 | History/Economics | Oklahoma State University
Abstracts
Fact and Fiction: A Look at Two Works by Mirza Hasan Khan E‘temad os-Saltaneh Naser od-Din Shah, the Telegraph, and the Kurdish Revolt of 1880