About our staff
Dr Hana Sleiman
Lecturer in Modern Middle Eastern History
- Email: hana.sleiman@ed.ac.uk
- Room 3.12, William Robertson Wing, Old Medical School, Teviot Place
Office hours
Biography
I am a historian of the modern Middle East whose research focuses on intellectual history, histories of print and archive theory. Before joining the University of Edinburgh, I was an Early Career Research Fellow in History at Murray Edwards College, University of Cambridge (2020-2022).
My PhD dissertation, completed in May 2021, is titled “History Writing and History Making in Twentieth-Century Beirut” and is available to read online. I earned an MA from Columbia University (2013) working on archive creation and appropriation in modern Palestinian history. This project resulted in an article published in the Arab Studies Journal and an exhibition at the Qalandiya International biennale, Beirut.
My archival work focuses on visual culture and oral history archives. Previously, I was Special Collections Librarian at the American University of Beirut Archives (2014 – 2016), working on the Constantine Zurayk Archive and co-leading the Palestinian Oral History Archive.
External appointments
British Society for Middle East Studies (BRISMES), Council Member;Endangered Archives Programme, the British Library, Member of International Advisory Committee;Arab Oral History Archive, American University of Beirut, Affiliate Researcher;Institute for Palestine Studies, Senior Fellow;Arab Council for the Social Sciences, Member.
Summary of research interests
Places:- Mediterranean
- Near East
- Gender
- Ideas
- Material Culture
- Nineteenth Century
- Twentieth Century & After
Research interests
I am interested in how knowledge production in the humanities and the social sciences has shaped the modern Arab world, focusing on twentieth-century Syria, Lebanon and Palestine.
As a historian—and previously an archivist—I have maintained a long-standing interest in the construction of archives and meta-narratives in the modern history of the Eastern Mediterranean. This interest has materialised in published writing, exhibitions, and archive-building projects.
My book project History Writing and History Making in Twentieth Century Beirut retraces Beirut’s historiographical ecosystem in the twentieth century. It interrogates the professions of record keeping and history writing and the dichotomous and gendered nature in which they were developed.
My upcoming project follows the development of this historical thought in the world of publishing radical children’s books starting the 1970s. It retraces the career of Dar al-Fata al-Arabi, a revolutionary publishing house based in Beirut and Cairo, which produced anti-colonial children’s books widely read across the Arab world.
Research projects
History Writing and History Making in Twentieth Century Beirut (book project)
Dar al-Fata al-Arabi Oral History Archive (part of the American University of Beirut's The Arab Oral History Archive: Gender, Alternative Histories, and the Production of Knowledge)
Undergraduate teaching
Revolution and Reform in the Modern Middle East (HIST10489) - Honours elective
Historical Skills & Methods II (Posters of Global Solidarity pathway)
Global Connections since 1450, Middle East Nationalisms
Publications
Published
Hana Sleiman, “The Paper Trail of a Liberation Movement,” Arab Studies Journal 24, no. 1 (Spring 2016); 42 – 67. - Translated to Arabic in Mada Masr.
Hana Sleiman & Kaoukab Chebaro, “Archiving Palestinian Oral History: Problematics of Mediation,” Journal for Palestine Studies (2017); 63-76.
Forthcoming
Hana Sleiman, “History as a Cautionary Tale,” for History of the Present special issue on Pandemic Histories: Meditations and Migrations (commissioned, forthcoming).
Hana Sleiman, “L’histoire par omission: Des archives perdues, pillées, détruites”, tr. Benjamin Guérif, Institut du Monde Arabe’s Araborama edition titled Ce que la Palestine apporte au monde (commissioned, forthcoming).
Hana Sleiman and Nadi Abusaada, “A Geography of the Future”, review of Atlas of Palestine 1871-1877, by S. Abu Sitta, 2020, London, Palestine Land Society, Palestine Exploration Quarterly, 2023 (commissioned, forthcoming).