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Introduction to the Department
Associated Institutions


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Oriental Institute, Room 212 • Professor Peter Dorman, Chair • Paula Manzuk, Department Administrator

 


An Introduction to the Department

The languages and civilizations of the Near East have been a major part of the University's teaching and research commitment since its inception.

William Rainey Harper, the University's founder and first president, was a Hebrew scholar and author of a grammar widely used in institutions of higher learning for more than three-quarters of a century. Research done at Chicago has helped to form the very basis of the modern disciplines of Assyriology, Egyptology, and ancient Near Eastern Archaeology.

The creation of "Islamic Civilization" as a curriculum was effected at Chicago. In all these areas and related subfields a faculty of distinguished scholars now extends this tradition, keeping the University of Chicago at the forefront of worldwide developments in Near Eastern studies. Graduates of the Department have for decades been among the leading international experts in their fields.

An interdisciplinary approach to learning is a characteristic of the Chicago intellectual tradition. In the Department of Near Eastern Languages and Civilizations students are encouraged to participate in courses, seminars, and workshops where they, as well as the NELC faculty, interact with their counterparts in anthropology, art history, classics, comparative literature, history, law, linguistics, political science, and religious studies. NELC also has a joint degree program with the Department of Linguistics.

This interdisciplinary and team approach is especially facilitated by the participation of many of the students and faculty in the work of the University's Oriental Institute and Center for Middle Eastern Studies. The Department also publishes the Journal of Near Eastern Studies, which is one of the leading journals in Ancient Near Eastern and Islamic studies.


Associated Institutions

The Oriental Institute

The Oriental Institute is a research organization and museum devoted to the study of all aspects of ancient Near Eastern civilizations. Founded as a part of the University in 1919 by James Henry Breasted, the Institute is an internationally recognized leader in research and scholarship on the archaeology, philology, and history of the ancient Near East. Multi-volume dictionaries of Akkadian, Hittite, and Demotic Egyptian are currently in preparation. Oriental Institute scholars have conducted epigraphic, architectural, and archaeological surveys throughout the Near East and have excavated more than one hundred sites including early Neolithic villages, Bronze Age towns, Mesopotamian cities, the Achaemenid capital of Persepolis, and early Islamic towns on the Red Sea coast. From its inception it has fostered projects that coordinate independent lines of research involving the close collaboration of archaeologists, art historians, and philologists. NELC faculty members in ancient Near Eastern fields constitute the core of the Oriental Institute staff, and many NELC students are involved in Oriental Institute projects, both in Chicago and abroad. Several active archaeological field expeditions are sponsored by the Oriental Institute and are directed by NELC faculty members. These include the Abydos expedition in Egypt, the Hamoukar expedition in Syria, and the Zincirli and Kerkenes expeditions in Turkey.



The Center for Middle Eastern Studies

The Center for Middle Eastern Studies is an interdepartmental and interdivisional unit which serves as a focal point for faculty, research associates, and students concerned with the area from Morocco to Pakistan, from the beginning of Islam to the present, in all academic disciplines. The Center was established in 1965, and since 1973 has been a U.S. Department of Education Title VI National Resource Center for Language and Area Studies. The Center fosters research and teaching, ensures the availability of library resources, brings to the University visiting scholars whose work strengthens and complements that of the regular faculty, holds conferences, symposia, and workshops, and sponsors a variety of Middle East-related extra-curricular activities and events. Especially important for NELC students are the Center's language circles which offer regularly scheduled talks and discussions in Arabic, Hebrew, Persian, and Turkish. The Center offers an MA in Middle Eastern Studies and has been conducting since 1989 a very successful Summer Arabic Program.

 

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