As a field that began in the US in the 1960s, public history brings to the fore the history of those whose voices and lives have been omitted from colonial and national archives, whose contents often relay hegemonic narratives. It opens scholarly space for multivocality and shared authority in driving historical inquiry and study, effectively encouraging new perspectives in how the public views and interprets the past, and challenges the very nature of archives.
While public history is well-established in many regions, it remains in its relative infancy within Middle Eastern studies. Scholars, practitioners, and institutions in the Arab World have been navigating questions of historical memory, public engagement, and the politics of representation for a long time. However, the field remains without clear theoretical and structural framing, and these efforts have not fully coalesced into a sub-discipline of Middle Eastern studies. This conference seeks to map the current state of public history in the Middle East and foster dialogue on its challenges, opportunities, and intersections with broader social, political, and cultural processes.
This conference invites paper submissions for an interdisciplinary gathering dedicated to exploring the emergence, development, and practice of public history in the Middle East. We encourage submissions that address, but are not limited to, the following questions:
How have public history practices been shaped by the social, political, and cultural landscapes of the Middle East?
What role do governments, institutions, and grassroots movements play in shaping public memory and historical narratives in and about the Middle East?
How are colonial histories and their legacies navigated in public history projects?
In what ways do digital technologies and social media influence the creation and dissemination of historical knowledge in the region?
How do public history initiatives engage with contentious or silenced aspects of Middle Eastern history?
What challenges and opportunities exist for collaboration between academic historians and public history practitioners in the Middle East?
How is public history preserved in the Gulf Region? How is it affected by political and economic factors (legitimacy and the rentier state).
What are the consequences of marginalizing public history in the Gulf? Does this marginalization link to the contradictions between local memory and official state narratives?
We welcome contributions from a variety of disciplines, including history, anthropology, archaeology, cultural studies, and digital humanities, as well as insights from museum professionals, educators, and independent practitioners.