Nora Elizabeth Barakat
Assistant Professor of History
Bio
I am a historian of the late Ottoman Empire and the Modern Middle East. My research focuses on people, commodities and landscapes in the interior regions between the Mediterranean and the Indian Ocean in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. I have a particular interest in how legal categories of population, property and economy shaped and were shaped by the everyday experiences of social life. I am also committed to bringing both the Ottoman Empire and the Middle East into discussions of world history, especially narratives about capitalism and modern state formation. I teach courses on modern Middle East history, capital and crisis, Islamic law, and environmental history.
My current book project, Bedouin Bureaucrats: Nomads and Property in the Ottoman Empire, examines the ways tent-dwelling inhabitants of the Syrian interior contributed to and contested attempts to transform the desert fringe into a grain-exporting breadbasket in the second half of the nineteenth century. The project locates the experience of the Ottoman Syrian interior in a global context of commercial and administrative expansion into landscapes deemed underproductive, examining similarities and divergences with the American West and the Russian steppe. Using court and land registers, I uncover the stories of specific tent-dwelling individuals and communities involved in struggles over property, commerce, and the forms of modern governance. My other ongoing project combines my interests in the histories of Islamic law and capitalism. It explores the twentieth-century legacies of late Ottoman economy-making efforts in the Eastern Mediterranean, Iraq and the Persian Gulf, particularly the codification of civil law. My research has been supported by the National Endowment for the Humanities, the American Council of Learned Societies, the Mellon Foundation, the Fulbright Foundation, and the Center for American and Overseas Research Centers.
Before coming to Stanford, I completed my PhD at the University of California, Berkeley and taught in the Persian Gulf for five years, first at Qatar University and then at New York University Abu Dhabi. At NYU Abu Dhabi, I co-founded OpenGulf, a set of interconnected digital projects focusing on historical documentation about the Gulf region.
Academic Appointments
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Assistant Professor, History
Professional Education
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Ph.D, University of California, Berkeley
2024-25 Courses
- Development and Dispossession
HISTORY 82N (Spr) - Graduate Research Seminar in Ottoman and Middle East History
HISTORY 481, JEWISHST 287S, JEWISHST 481 (Spr) -
Independent Studies (6)
- Graduate Directed Reading
HISTORY 399W (Aut, Win, Spr) - Graduate Research
HISTORY 499X (Aut, Win, Spr) - Senior Research I
HISTORY 299A (Aut, Win, Spr) - Senior Research II
HISTORY 299B (Aut, Win, Spr) - Senior Research III
HISTORY 299C (Aut, Win, Spr) - Undergraduate Directed Research and Writing
HISTORY 299S (Aut, Win, Spr)
- Graduate Directed Reading
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Prior Year Courses
2023-24 Courses
- Development and Dispossession
ESF 25 (Aut) - Development and Dispossession
ESF 25A (Aut) - Graduate Research Seminar in Ottoman and Middle East History
HISTORY 481, JEWISHST 287S, JEWISHST 481 (Spr, Sum) - Making the Modern Middle East
HISTORY 181B (Aut) - Making the Modern Middle East
HISTORY 81B (Aut) - Readings in the Historiography of the Modern Middle East
HISTORY 381 (Spr)
2022-23 Courses
- Capital and Crisis in the Middle East and the World
HISTORY 383F (Win) - Graduate Research Seminar in Ottoman and Middle East History
HISTORY 481, JEWISHST 287S, JEWISHST 481 (Spr) - Introduction to Islamic Law
HISTORY 281D, HISTORY 381D (Spr) - Making the Modern Middle East
HISTORY 181B (Aut) - Making the Modern Middle East
HISTORY 81B (Aut)
- Development and Dispossession
Stanford Advisees
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Doctoral Dissertation Reader (AC)
Lee Bagan, Emre Can Daglioglu, Ozgul Ozdemir -
Orals Evaluator
Ozgul Ozdemir -
Doctoral (Program)
Mustafa Emre Gunaydi