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ID133295
Title ProperPhilip Hitti, Brazil, and the diasporic histories of area studies
LanguageENG
AuthorKaram, John Tofik
Publication2014.
Summary / Abstract (Note)This article rethinks area studies through the diasporic histories of influential graduates of the Syrian Protestant College. My focus is on Philip Hitti and his ties with fellow alumni who migrated to the Brazilian city of São Paulo. Examining his first visit to Brazil in 1925, letter exchanges through the 1940s, and a second trip in 1951, I ask how Hitti and São Paulo-based alumni sought to establish an Arab studies program in Brazil. In borrowing a template for studying the Middle East, Hitti and colleagues imbued it with a widespread sentiment that Arab and Muslim legacies of the Iberian peninsula had shaped Portugal, and thus Brazil's historical and linguistic formation. They relocated a model of area studies but refitted its content. In revealing how the institution of area studies moved across and merged with varied sociocultural settings, these diasporic histories provincialize the U.S. model for knowing the Middle East.
`In' analytical NoteInternational Journal of Middle East Studies Vol.46, No.3; Aug.2014: p.451-471
Journal SourceInternational Journal of Middle East Studies Vol.46, No.3; Aug.2014: p.451-471
Key WordsDiasporic Histories ;  Syrian Protestant College ;  Philip Hitti ;  Brazil ;  Muslim Legacies ;  Arab World ;  Iberian Peninsula ;  Sociocultural Settings ;  Middle East ;  Linguistic Formation ;  United States - US ;  Diaspora ;  Historical Context ;  Portugal