Occupation
Assistant Professor
Contact
ABOUT
Henny Ziai is a Lecturer (Assistant Professor) in the History of Middle East and Africa at SOAS, University of London. Her research lies at the intersection of political theory, critical political economy, and Islamic studies, with a focus on formations of the colonial and the emergence of modern political subjectivity in Sudan during the long nineteenth century.
She is currently converting her doctoral thesis, entitled “Ploughing for the Hereafter: Debt, Time, and Mahdist Resistance in Northern Sudan, 1821-1935,” into a book manuscript. Her thesis approaches the Mahdist insurgency (1881-1898) against Ottoman rule not as a political event but as an extraordinary conceptual repository, a starting point from which to rethink some of the key categories of political economy, including debt, property, and law. In doing so, it offers an account of the constitution of the distinct spheres of the ‘religious’ and the ‘economic,’ of ‘Islam’ and ‘political economy.’
Discipline
History
Sub Areas
19th-21st Centuries
African Studies
Colonialism
Middle East/Near East Studies
Political Economy
Geographic Areas of Interest
Africa (Sub-Saharan)
All Middle East
Sudan
Languages
Persian (fluent)
Arabic (advanced)
Swahili (intermediate)
French (advanced)
Education
PhD
| 2021
| Middle Eastern, South Asian, and African Studies
| Columbia University
MA
| 2014
| Near and Middle Eastern Studies
| SOAS
MA
| 2012
| African Studies
| Oxford University
BA
| 2010
| Philosophy, Politics and Economics
| Oxford University
Abstracts
The “indebted peasant”: human capital, development and neoliberalism in Sudan’s Gezira Scheme
Debt as Colonialism?: Ottoman-Egypt, Sudan and the Mahdist Revolution
From Mahdists to Peasants: the corporation and colonial power in the Gezira Scheme in Sudan
When ‘Turks’ Became Infidels: Debt, Mahdism and the Refashioning of Ethical Subjects in Ottoman Sudan
Imminent Critique: Mahdism, the End of Time, and Rethinking Political Economy in Ottoman Sudan, 1881-1925
Producing ‘Economy’ and ‘Religion’: A Genealogy of Political Economy in Ottoman Sudan