ID | 172590 |
Title Proper | Bernath Lecture |
Other Title Information | Approaching the Islamic World |
Language | ENG |
Author | Shannon, Kelly J |
Summary / Abstract (Note) | To borrow a concept from Community, one of my favorite TV shows, it often feels as though we’re currently on the “darkest timeline.” So I thought I’d start my Bernath Lecture with something lighthearted … like a murder. In April 1921, a woman in Washington, D.C. shot and killed her husband. Then, as now, it was much less common for a wife to murder her husband than the reverse. What makes this case particularly noteworthy to me was the fact that the wife, early twenty-something Lydia Gertrude Kanode Molavi, was American, and her twenty-six year-old husband, Abdul Hussein Molavi, was Iranian. |
`In' analytical Note | Diplomatic History Vol. 44, No.3; Jun 2020: p.387–408 |
Journal Source | Diplomatic History Vol: 44 No 3 |
Key Words | Islamic World ; Bernath Lecture |