Pedram Khosronejad (Persian: پدرام خسرونژاد; born 1969) is a socio-cultural and visual anthropologist of contemporary Iran. He is of Iranian origin and commenced his studies in painting (B.A. University of Art, Tehran, Iran) and in Visual Art Research (M.A. University of Art, Tehran, Iran) before moving to France with a Ph.D. grant in 2000. He obtained his D.E.A. (Diplome d’Etudes Approfondies) at Ecole Pratique des Hautes Etudes (Sorbonne, Paris)[1] and obtained his Ph.D. at the École des Hautes Études en Sciences Sociales (Paris).[2] His research interests include cultural and social anthropology, the anthropology of death and dying, visual anthropology, visual piety, holy artifacts, and religious material culture, with a particular interest in Iran, Persianate societies and the Islamic world.

Pedram Khosronejad
Born
Pedram Khosronejad

(1969-04-02) 2 April 1969 (age 55)
Tehran, Iran
Academic background
Alma materUniversity of Tehran
Ecole Pratique des Hautes Etudes
École des Hautes Études en Sciences Sociales
ThesisLes Lions en Pierre Sculptés chez les Bakhtiâri : Description et Significations de Sculptures Zoomorphes dans une Société Tribale du Sud-ouest de l'Iran (2007)
Doctoral advisorThierry Zarcone
Academic work
DisciplineSocial anthropology and Visual anthropology

Since July 2020, Khosronejad has been curator of Persian Arts at the Powerhouse Museum, Sydney, Australia;an adjunct professor at the Religion and Society Research Cluster in School of Social Sciences at Western Sydney University; and a fellow at the Department of Anthropology at Harvard University.

Between 2015 and 2019, Khosronejad was the Farzaneh Family Scholar and associate director for Iranian and Persian Gulf Studies at the School of International Studies/School of Media&Strategic Communications of Oklahoma State University, U.S.

Between 2007 and 2015, he held the position of Goli Rais Larizadeh Fellow of the Iran Heritage Foundation for the Anthropology of Iran in the Department of Social Anthropology at the University of St Andrews. Since its creation, this full-time academic position remained the only academic appointment in Europe and the West dedicated entirely to the anthropology of Iran. [3] He is chair of The Anthropology of the Middle East and Central Eurasia Network of the European Association of Social Anthropologists.[4]

German Civilian Expatriates of Persia & WWII edit

Since August 2019, Khosronejad has been working on a groundbreaking interdisciplinary research project regarding the German Civilian Expatriates of Persia (Iran), Australians who had been detained with their parents in Iran in 1941 after the country's invasion by the British and Soviet Armies during the Second World War. This project concerns the life stories of 512 German civilian internees who were detained in Australian internment camps and their contribution to the field of Iranian Studies and also to the development of Australia after the war period. It is astonishing to learn that Dr. Hans Eberhard Wulff the author of The Traditional Crafts of Persia, Prof. Wilhelm Max Eilers great orientalist and archaeologist, and Karl Jan Zoubek, professor of music at the University of Tehran, was among them.

Photography of African Slavery in Qajar Era Iran edit

For the first time in the history of Iranian Studies, in 2014, when Khosronejad was a visiting professor at the Nantes Institute for Advanced Studies and at the same time held a chair position at the University of Nantes in France, he discovered a new and controversial topic, the Photography of African Slavery in Qajar-Era Iran, through archival photography, interviews and scattered texts. Since then, he has organized and curated more than fifteen academic photo exhibitions (e.g. University of California Davis, the University of California Santa Barbara, and the University of New South Wales), and has given talks and seminars in over twenty universities and museums all around the world (e.g. Johns Hopkins University, University of California Irvine, Schomburg Center, New York Public Library, University of Tehran, and National Library and Archive of Iran) regarding Iranian photography of African slavery and race, gender, and ethnic issues.

  • Publication: Qajar African Nannies: African Slaves and Aristocratic Babies (2017, New York: Iranian and Persian Gulf Studies), 70 pp., in Visual Studies of Modern Iran, Vol. I. [1]
  • Publication: Out of Focus, Photography of African Slavery in Qajar Iran, The Anthropology of the Contemporary Middle East and Central Eurasia 4/1 (2016), 1-31.
  • Exhibition Catalogues : Photography, Race and Slavery: African Sitters of Qajar Era Iran, In association with the Photographies in Motion: Explorations Across Space, Time, and Media workshop (2019, REID Library, The University of Western Australia, Perth, Australia).
  • Exhibition Catalogues : Unveiling the Veiled: Royal Consorts, Slaves and Prostitutes in Qajar Photographs (2018, Mosher Alumni House, McCune Library, University of California, Santa Barbara, California, U.S.).
  • Exhibition Catalogues : Re-imagining Iranian African Slavery: photography as material Culture (2018, the Buehler Alumni Center, University of California, Davis, California, U.S.).
  • Organizer and curator: Photography, Race and Slavery: African Sitters of Qajar Era Iran, In association with the Photographs in Motion: Explorations Across Space, Time, and Media workshop (REID Library, The University of Western Australia, Perth, Australia), November 2019.
  • Organizer and curator: Qajar Photography of African Slavery in Motion: Space, Time and Media, The University of Western Australia, Perth, Australia, October 2019.
  • Organizer and curator: Unveiling the Veiled: Royal Consorts, Slaves and Prostitutes in Qajar Photographs, Alumni Center, the University of California, Santa Barbara, California, U.S., October 2018.
  • Organizer and curator: Re-imagining Iranian African Slavery: photography as material Culture, the Buehler Alumni Center, University of California, Davis, California, U.S., May–June 2018.
  • Organizer and curator: The Qajar Lens: Diversity in Qajar Photography, Iranian and Persian Gulf Studies, Oklahoma State University, U.S., March–May 2018.
  • Organizer and curator: Lost Souls: Photography, African Slavery and Anthropology, Institute for Iranian Contemporary Historical Studies, Tehran, Iran, January 2017.
  • Organizer and curator: African Slavery in Qajar Iran, National Library, Tehran, Iran, January 2017.
  • Paper: Photographs as Objects of Sexual Desire in Iran, Slavery and Sexual Labor in the Middle East and North Africa, University of California, Santa Barbara, U.S., October 2018.
  • Paper: Re-imagining Iranian African Slavery: photography as material Culture, Department of Anthropology, University of California, Davis, U.S., May 2018.
  • Paper: Digital Afterlives: from archive to cyberspace, The Lapidus Center inaugural conference, The Lapidus Center for the Historical Analysis of Transatlantic Slavery. The Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture, the New York Public Library, New York, U.S., November 2017.
  • Paper: Photography and African Heritage in Qajar Iran, Department of African American and African Studies, University of California, Davis, U.S., May 2017.
  • Paper: Lost Souls: Photography of African Eunuchs & Female Servants in Qajar Iran, Department of Near Eastern Languages and Cultures, University of California, Los Angeles, U.S., May 2017.
  • Paper: Photography of African Slavery in Iran: history, methodology and political challenges, Kansas African Studies Center and Dept. of Anthropology, University of Kansas, U.S., April 2017.
  • Paper: African Communities in Qajar Iran: using photographs as socio-historical resources, African Studies Center, Michigan State University, U.S., April 2017.
  • Paper: Out of Focus: Photography of African Slavery in Qajar Iran (updates from the field), Samuel Jordan Center for Persian Studies and Culture, University of California, Irvine, U.S., February 2017.
  • Paper: History can Produce Anthropological Material: Photography, Material Culture and African Slavery in Iran, Department of History & Sociology, Open University, Mashhad, Iran, February 2017.
  • Paper: Did African Slavery exist in Iran: Photography, Ethno-history and Archival Research, Institute for Iranian Contemporary Studies Historical, Tehran, Iran, February 2017.
  • Paper: Methodology in History and Visual Anthropology: African Representations in Qajar Photography, Department of English Literature, Shiraz University, Shiraz, Iran, January 2017.
  • Paper: Photography of African Slavery in Modern Iran (1840s-1960s), Slavery in 19th and 20th Century Iran, 11th Biennial Iranian Studies Conference, Vienna, Austria, August 2016.
  • Paper: Lost Souls: Photography of African Slavery in Qajar Iran, Colloquium Series Fall 2016, Department of Anthropology, Johns Hopkins University, U.S., October 2016.
  • Interview: Qajar Iran and the Abolishment of African Slavery: Photography and History, World Economy, Iran, (in Persian) 2017.
  • Interview: Slavery Tales: History, Anthropology and Photography, Shahrvand Daily News, Iran, 2017. (in Persian).
  • Interview: Photography of African Slavery in Iran, Interview of Dr. Louise Siddons, Associate Professor of Art History (Department of Art, Oklahoma State University) with Dr. Pedram Khosronejad, 2016.
  • Interview: The face of African slavery in Qajar Iran – in pictures, the Guardian, 2016.
  • Interview: The face of African slavery in Qajar Iran-in pictures, the Guardian, January 14, 2016, Persian translation for the Centre for the Great Islamic Encyclopaedia by S. Ghomashchi.

Administrative and editorial activities edit

  • Founder and series editor, Iranian Studies, Berlin-Münster-Wien-Zürich-London: LIT Verlag, 2014. [2]
  • Founder The Avini Collection, fully academic and university-based research collection (University of St Andrews, U.K.) which currently includes 516 books and films (both documentary and fiction) on different topics and angles vis-à-vis the Iran-Iraq war (1980-1988), 2013.[3]
  • Founder and curator, Ethnographic Film and Media Festival of the Anthropology of the MiddleEast and Central Eurasia, 2012.[4]
  • Founder and chief editor, Journal of Anthropology of the Contemporary Middle East and Central Eurasia (ACME), Sean Kingston Publishing, U.K, 2012.[5]
  • Founder and series editor, The Anthropology of Persianate Societies, Sean Kingston Publishing, U.K, 2011. [6]
  • Founder and moderator, the Anthropology of the Middle East and Central Eurasia (Russia, the Caucasus, Central Asia, China) Network, European Association of Social Anthropologists, 2010.[7]

Selected bibliography edit

Films edit

Online multimedia research platforms edit

  • Art from German WWII Internees of Persia in Australia [9]
  • German Civilian Expatriates of Persia & WWII [10]
  • Bakhtiari Sacred Landscape [11]
  • Bakhtiari Women's Lamentations [12]
  • Sorudkhani and Shahnamehkhani among the Bakhtiari [13]

References edit

  1. ^ The Ecole pratique des hautes études (EPHE) is a leading institution of higher education and research, which provides highly specialized practical training in basic and applied research within three core Sections: Earth and Life Sciences; Historical and Philological Sciences; Religious Sciences.
  2. ^ The EHESS comprises over 47 research centers, 37 shared with the Centre national de la recherche scientifique. It nevertheless does not constitute a research institute in the conventional sense of the word. Life at the school is centered on research training. Students work alongside experienced researchers, a perspective from which they gain privileged access to the mechanics of research in progress.
  3. ^ "Dr Pedram Khosronejad". University of St. Andrews, Department of Social Anthropology.
  4. ^ "Anthropology of the Middle East and Central Eurasia Network of the European Association of Social Anthropologists".

External links edit

  • Personal website [14]
  • Personal page (Western Sydney University) [15]
  • LinkedIn [16]
  • The Anthropology of the Middle East and Central Eurasia Network [17]
  • Academic.edu [18]