Jennifer Mogannam
Dr. Jennifer Mogannam is an Assistant Professor in the department of Critical Race and Ethnic Studies. She is also a UC President's-Mellon Humanities Initiative early faculty fellow and an affiliate of the Center for the Middle East and North Africa at UC Santa Cruz. She received her Ph.D. from the Department of Ethnic Studies at UC San Diego and an MA in Arab and Middle Eastern Studies from the American University of Beirut (AUB).
Jennifer is a critical, cross-disciplinary scholar who examines 20th and 21st century Palestinian and Arab transnational movements and third world solidarities, with an eye for analyzing movement praxis for liberated futures. This work intervenes in the critical study of refugees, borders, colonialism and imperialism, global scales of race and indigeneity, and resistance and is grounded in transnational, women of color, indigenous, and Palestinian methods and lenses of liberation.
Jennifer’s current book project frames the stakes and limits of revolution for the stateless, the refugee, and the citizen as defined by active participant narrations of revolution in 1970s Lebanon. Specifically, she examines the moment and relationship between Palestinian and Lebanese revolutionary trajectories that built coalition in Lebanon during what has been deemed the Lebanese Civil war. This work intervenes in the question of coalition building and internal power in movement praxis, gendered labor in anti-colonial struggle and redefining and resisting epistemic violence on the path of decolonization.
Her publications, which speak to borders, imperialism, Marxist thought, feminism, social movements, and refugees, have been placed in American Quarterly, Critical Ethnic Studies, Radical History Review, Social Identities and Amerasia, with more in the pipeline. She also has an ongoing, collaborative Borders are Obsolete project, co-created with Dr. Leslie Quintanilla, that seeks to challenge border systems through illuminating grassroots work to circumvent them.
Her work, while often historical, is also always forward looking, toward the possibilities of decolonization and building a new world.
Supervisors: Suad Joseph, Kalindi Vora , Daphne Taylor-Garcia, Dennis Childs , Yen Le Espiritu, Mayssun Succarieh , Jodi Kim, Rosemary Sayigh, Fawwaz Traboulsi, and Tarif Khalidi
Jennifer is a critical, cross-disciplinary scholar who examines 20th and 21st century Palestinian and Arab transnational movements and third world solidarities, with an eye for analyzing movement praxis for liberated futures. This work intervenes in the critical study of refugees, borders, colonialism and imperialism, global scales of race and indigeneity, and resistance and is grounded in transnational, women of color, indigenous, and Palestinian methods and lenses of liberation.
Jennifer’s current book project frames the stakes and limits of revolution for the stateless, the refugee, and the citizen as defined by active participant narrations of revolution in 1970s Lebanon. Specifically, she examines the moment and relationship between Palestinian and Lebanese revolutionary trajectories that built coalition in Lebanon during what has been deemed the Lebanese Civil war. This work intervenes in the question of coalition building and internal power in movement praxis, gendered labor in anti-colonial struggle and redefining and resisting epistemic violence on the path of decolonization.
Her publications, which speak to borders, imperialism, Marxist thought, feminism, social movements, and refugees, have been placed in American Quarterly, Critical Ethnic Studies, Radical History Review, Social Identities and Amerasia, with more in the pipeline. She also has an ongoing, collaborative Borders are Obsolete project, co-created with Dr. Leslie Quintanilla, that seeks to challenge border systems through illuminating grassroots work to circumvent them.
Her work, while often historical, is also always forward looking, toward the possibilities of decolonization and building a new world.
Supervisors: Suad Joseph, Kalindi Vora , Daphne Taylor-Garcia, Dennis Childs , Yen Le Espiritu, Mayssun Succarieh , Jodi Kim, Rosemary Sayigh, Fawwaz Traboulsi, and Tarif Khalidi
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