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Laila Prager
University of Hamburg
Occupation
Professor
Contact
Secondary Phone: +49-40-42838-4182
Fax: +49-40-42838-6288
Social Anthropology
Institut fuer Ethnologie Edmund-Siemers-Allee 1 - Flügelbau West (ESA W)
Hamburg 20146
Germany
ABOUT
Laila Prager is Professor of Social Anthropology at the University of Hamburg (Germany) and a member of AGYA (Arab-German Young Academy of Sciences and Humanities). Formerly, she worked as a researcher and senior lecturer in Social Anthropology at the University of New York University Abu Dhabi (UAE), Münster University, and Leipzig University (Germany). She has conducted ethnographic research among Bedouin societies in Syria and Jordan, with a special emphasis on the narrative representation and performance of the past. In addition, she has done extensive fieldwork among the Arab speaking Alawi/Alawite (Nusairy) society in South Eastern Turkey (Hatay/Çukurova) and among Alawi migrant communities in Germany, focusing on topics relating to kinship, cosmology, inter-religious conflicts, ritual healing, and migration. She has also conducted research among Kuwaiti-Palestinian refugees in Jordan and Germany. Since 2014, her research focuses on the upsurge of heritage related discourses and performances in the Gulf Region. Drawing on data collected during fieldwork in the UAE, Bahrain, Qatar, Syria, and Jordan. Prager is undertaking an extensive comparative study of the various ways in which heritage is displayed, enacted, and appropriated at local, national, and transnational levels. In this context, Prager examines heritage museums and parks, cultural festivals, local sport events, oral history initiatives, the reinvigoration of “traditional” art and architecture, heritage as covered in various media productions, and the interrelations between local heritage productions and UNESCO World Heritage discourses. By looking into the ways in which ‘heritage’ is utilized to frame and legitimize cultural identities. Prager is particularly interested in the revitalization of imageries relating to ‘Bedouinities,’ ‘Tribalism,’ and ‘Auto-Orientalism.’ Moreover, Prager is building up an interdisciplinary research project on the societal transformations emerging from the increase of major diseases in the Middle East, such as diabetes type 2, thalassemia, and other genetically induced illnesses.
Discipline
Anthropology
Sub Areas
Cultural Studies
Diaspora/Refugee Studies
Middle East/Near East Studies
Minorities
Ethnography
Cinema/Film
Gulf Studies
Geographic Areas of Interest
Arabian Peninsula
Jordan
Syria
Turkey
UAE
Specialties
Alawi Society & Cult Changes
Arab & Turkish Migration To Eur
Heritage, Bedouin Society, Oral History
Languages
English (fluent)
French (native)
German (native)
Spanish (intermediate)
Turkish (advanced)
Indonesian (elementary)
Arabic (intermediate)
Education
PhD | 2010 | Social Anthropology | University of Muenster (Germany)
MA | 2005 | Social Anthropology | University of Muenster (Germany)
Abstracts
Performing tribal histories in Bedouin TV-series (musalsal badawi). Diverging aims, addressees and self-perceptions of tribal film making in Syria and Jordan. Struggling for masculinity in the modern world: The case of urban middle class Palestinians in Amman Failing Genetic Counselling Programs, Mediterranean Anemia, and Ethnic Stigmatization in Turkey