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Alireza Doostdar
University of Chicago
Occupation
Associate Professor
Contact

United States
ABOUT
My research and teaching bring together anthropological approaches to the study of Islam, science, gender, embodiment, and the state. My first book, The Iranian Metaphysicals: Explorations in Science, Islam, and the Uncanny (Princeton University Press, 2018), examines the rationalization of the metaphysical “unseen” in Iran since the early twentieth century. Through ethnographic and historical analysis, I consider a range of knowledges and practices usually treated as marginal to orthodox Islam: sorcery and occult sciences, séances with the souls of the dead, jinn exorcisms, the marvels of Shi‘i mystics, and various New Age-inflected therapeutic spiritualities. My other interests include the relationship between revolution and state in Iran, Iranian spiritual cinema and its engagements with Hollywood sci-fi, fantasy, and horror, and debates over the Islamization of the social sciences.
Discipline
Anthropology
Sub Areas
Iranian Studies
Cinema/Film
Cultural Studies
Colonialism
Ethnography
Gender/Women's Studies
Historiography
History Of Religion
History Of Science
Islamic Studies
Islamic Thought
Media
Middle East/Near East Studies
Modern
Modernization
Mysticism/Sufi Studies
Nationalism
Persian
Political Economy
Pop Culture
State Formation
Technology
Theory
Geographic Areas of Interest
Iran
All Middle East
Education
PhD | 2012 | Anthropology | Harvard University
Abstracts
Sensing Jinn