Home Podcasts The afikra Podcast
The afikra Podcast

The afikra Podcast

afikra 485 Episodes Jun 29, 2026

The afikra Podcast is a flagship series that features experts from academia, art, media, urban planning, and other fields who are documenting and shaping the histories and cultures of the Arab world through their work. The podcast aims to inspire curiosity and provide recommendations for further exploration into various topics related to Arab culture and history.

Episodes

History of the British Raj in the Arabian Gulf | Prof. James Onley Jun 29, 2026 01:00:13 Imperialism was a masterclass in maintaining the fiction of autonomy while quietly acquiring the assets of an empire. Professor James Onley, chair of Gulf and Arab Studies at the American University of Sharjah, dissects the sophisticated loopholes used by colonial powers to exert influence without the liabilities of formal control. This conversation highlights the deep-seated socioeconomic connect
How Egypt Used Theater to Fight British Occupation | Prof. Carmen Gitre Jun 22, 2026 01:06:21 Theatrical stages often mirror the intricate evolution of the societies that build them. Professor Carmen Gitre explores the burgeoning performance culture of Cairo between 1867 and 1930. This era witnessed a shift from street storytelling and shadow plays to formal theater houses designed for an emerging class of Western-educated intellectuals. The discussion traverses the grand spectacle of the
The Legacy of Science & Faith in the Arab Muslim World | Prof. Nidhal Guessoum Jun 15, 2026 01:00:48 For centuries, the Arab and Muslim worlds led humanity in scientific discovery, establishing a culture where faith served as an inspiration rather than an obstacle to empirical research. The conversation with astrophysicist Dr. Nidhal Guessoum explores that profound intellectual legacy, from the systematization of algebra and breakthroughs in optics to the creation of the world's first dedicated a
Masculine Aesthetics & Sports in the Ottoman Empire | Professor Murat Yildiz Jun 8, 2026 01:04:19 Modern sports did not just change how people played; they fundamentally rewired how they lived, looked, and identified within a rapidly transforming world. The conversation with Murat Yildiz, an assosciate professor of history at Skidmore College, explores the high-stakes intersection of physical culture, social status, and the 19th-century quest for a new global aesthetic. Elite educational and m
Tobacco, Soap, Beer & Cars: 100 Years of Egyptian Print Advertising | Professor Bahia Shehab Jun 1, 2026 01:00:27 Egyptian print media has historically functioned as a cultural barometer, shifting from the early official bulletins of the 20th century into a relentless and aggressive form of capitalism on steroids. Professor Bahia Shehab discusses her book, "A Trade in Dreams: A Century of Egyptian Print Advertising", unpacking how visual culture has been both a witness to and a victim of political upheaval. H
Memory & the Systematic Mending of Heritage | Dima Srouji May 25, 2026 00:58:30 Palestinian architect and artist Dima Srouji explores the systematic displacement of Palestinian material culture and the liberation lab working to bring it home. For over a century, archaeology in Palestine has been weaponized, used as a tool for land grabs and the erasure of contemporary identity. From ancient glass vessels held in Western museums to human remains stored in university basements,
The Weirdest Items in the Library of Congress | Muhannad Salhi May 18, 2026 01:09:09 Rare artifacts within the vast archives of the Library of Congress (LOC) represent a shift in how our region's history is fundamentally understood. Moving beyond traditional nationalist timelines, Arab World specialist in the African and Middle East division at the LOC, Dr. Muhannad Salhi, explores the transition of diverse items in the library's "Near East" collection, from 3000-year-old economic
Invention of the Maghreb: Beyond the Native Colonial Gaze | Majid Hannoum May 11, 2026 00:59:12 Beyond the Orientalist myth of being seductive, mysterious, and dangerous, what is the reality of Tangier? Professor of anthropology Majid Hannoum deconstructs the invention of the Maghreb and delves into the complex socioeconomic and racial fabric of contemporary Moroccan cities. He explores how colonial legacies continue to shape identity, from the very term "Maghreb" – which he argues did not e
Modern Egyptian Art & Post-Colonial Cultural Politics | Clare Davies May 4, 2026 00:58:01 Modern Egyptian art was not simply an institutional byproduct of the 20th century, but rather a profound ontological shift in how the nature of the art object was fundamentally understood. Moving beyond traditional nationalist timelines, this transformation was deeply intertwined with the physical dismantling of historic Cairo, where stripped architectural fragments were repurposed into autonomous
Shar & the Forgotten Genocide of Libya | Ali Abdullatif Ahmida Apr 27, 2026 00:59:54 Unveiling the suppressed history of "Shar," Professor Ali Abdellatif Ahmida details the forgotten genocide of the Libyan people under Italian settler colonialism in 1911. As a distinguished political scientist and historian at the University of New England, Professor Ahmida dedicated 15 years to investigating why this mass tragedy was systematically erased from global scholarship and collective me
A Love Letter to Tunisian Artisans | Kenza Fourati Apr 20, 2026 00:54:45 Model and entrepreneur Kenza Fourati discusses her origins, growing up 1990s in Tunisia to becoming a trailblazing figure in the international fashion industry. She reflects on how she initially viewed beauty through a French lens and the subsequent realization of how limiting that perspective was to the beauty of her immediate surroundings. The conversation delves into her brand, Osay (Our Storie
Domicide in Homs & Beyond | Architect Ammar Azzouz Apr 13, 2026 00:49:30 The concept of domicide and its profound impact on Homs, Syria, is explored through the work and personal experiences of architect Ammar Azzouz. A research fellow at the University of Oxford, Dr. Azzouz discusses the deliberate destruction of homes, the trauma of exile, and his eventual return to his homeland. He examines how international attention frequently prioritizes the loss of ancient herit

Recommended