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Veli N. Yashin
University of Southern California
Occupation
Assistant Professor
Contact
3501 Trousdale Parkway
Taper Hall of Humanities 161 University of Southern California
Los Angeles CA 90089-0353
United States
ABOUT
Veli N. Yashin is an Assistant Professor of Comparative Literature at the University of Southern California. He holds a PhD in Arabic and Comparative Literature from Columbia University, and he is the winner of the 2013 Horst Frenz Prize of the American Comparative Literature Association. Yashin's work focuses on modern Arabic and Turkish literatures and more broadly engages the theoretical implications of the complex entanglement between cultural and political representation. His current book project, tentatively titled Disorienting Figures: The Rhetoric of Sovereignty between the Arab and the Turk, broaches these questions by implicating recent theoretical discussions on the concept of sovereignty with theories of authorship and authority and by attending to the emergence of modern prose in Arabic and Turkish in its relation to the transformations of political authority in the late-Ottoman Empire. Reading a series of literary, historical, and political nineteenth- and twentieth century texts published in Arabic and Turkish, among other languages, he claims that the divided and divisive figures of the sultan and the author that populate these texts testify to the contradictions and tensions of sovereignty in this period. Juxtaposing (de)formations of sovereign bodies with contemporary (de)constructions of authorial bodies, he argues that certain theological and political aspects associated with the sultan’s body henceforth come to be taken up by the body of the author. His research and teaching interests include the post-Ottoman world; the relationship between area studies and literary scholarship; conceptions of authority and sovereignty; legacies of German romanticism; histories and future(s) of philology; and Mediterranean studies.
Discipline
Literature
Sub Areas
Arab Studies
Comparative
Nationalism
Turkish Studies
Theory
Geographic Areas of Interest
Ottoman Empire
Arab States
Turkey
Europe
Specialties
Rhetoric & Literary Studies
Political Theology
Sovereignty
Languages
Arabic (fluent)
English (fluent)
German (fluent)
Hebrew (advanced)
Spanish (intermediate)
Turkish (native)
French (elementary)
Education
PhD | 2015 | MESAAS & ICLS | Columbia U
MPhil | 2011 | MESAAS & ICLS | Columbia U
MA | 2010 | MESAAS | Columbia U
BA | 2008 | MEALAC | Columbia U
Abstracts
The Sovereign and the Author: Ahmad Faris al-Shidyaq and the Political Somatology of the Late-Ottoman Empire Philology in Exile