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Assistant Professor of Middle East History, University of Dayton

Alda Benjamen is an Assistant Professor of History at the University of Dayton where she teaches courses on the modern history of the Middle East. Recently, she was the Avimalek Betyousef Faculty Fellow in the Department of History and the Center for Middle East Studies at the University of California, Berkeley. Prior to that, she was Fellow at the John W. Kluge Center at the Library of Congress and a postdoctoral researcher at the University of Pennsylvania Museum and the Smithsonian. These roles provided invaluable experience in public history, archival practices and community engagement.

Her book, Assyrians in Modern Iraq: Negotiating Political and Cultural Space (Cambridge University Press, February 2022), is a monograph on twentieth-century Iraqi intellectual history based on extensive primary research from within the country. Drawing upon oral and ethnographic sources and archival documents, in Arabic and modern Aramaic, uncovered at the Iraqi National Archives in Baghdad and private collections from the north, it explores the role of minorities in Iraq’s intellectual and mostly leftist opposition. She also has edited a special issue “Narratives of Co-existence and Pluralism in Northern Iraq” for the Journal of Contemporary Iraq and the Arab World (June 2020), as well as a roundtable, “Pluralism and Minoritization in the Middle East” for the International Journal of Middle East Studies (November 2018).

Experience

  • –present
    Assistant Professor of Middle East History , University of Dayton

Education

  • 2015 
    University of Maryland, College Park , PhD in History