Khayyat, Yasmine
- Yasmine Khayyat
- Associate Professor, Arabic Language and Literature
- Email: yasmine.khayyat@rutgers.edu
- Phone: 848-445-4314
- Office hours: by appointment
- Room #: 6173
- Office address: 15 Seminary Place College Avenue Campus
- Education:
Ph.D. Arabic Literature and Comparative Literature, Columbia University
M.A. Comparative Literature, School of Oriental and African Studies (SOAS)
B.A. English Literature, American University of Beirut (AUB) - Areas of Research/Interest:
My research interests include contemporary Arabic literature, Arabic poetry, cultural memory studies and literary theory.
My interest in memory studies dovetails with my own life experience growing up in Beirut during the Lebanese civil war (1975-90) and my desire to revisit this experience academically. At Columbia University I was part of the Engendering Archives Working Group Center for the Critical Analysis of Social Difference (CCASD) where I was in conversation with a diverse group of scholars on an interdisciplinary research project that explored the making of archives, specifically, the knowledge they afford and the question of what exceeds their grasp.
My fieldwork on war-related memorial sites in South Lebanon forms part of my current book project entitled Memory in Ruins: The Poetics of Aṭlāl in Lebanese Wartime and Postwar Cultural Production, which explores the intersection of classical Arabic poetic lamentations over ruins and their manifestations in contemporary Lebanese cultural productions. It traces the figuration of the ruin as a site of rupture and potentiality embodied in modern Arabic fiction, novels, poems, and sites of memory from the opening chapter of the Lebanese civil war to the present.
Before joining AMESALL, I offered courses on contemporary Arabic fiction, specifically the relationship between literature and war, at the Lebanese American University (LAU) in Beirut and New York University (NYU).
2018, Khayyat, Yasmine. “Pieces of Us: The Intimate as an Imperial Archive,” Journal of Middle East Women’s Studies.14:3. November 2018.
- Courses:
- War and Literature in the Arab World
- Literature and Memory in the Arab World
- Arabic Poetry in Translation
- Introductions to the Literatures of the Middle East
- Crossroads: Classical Literatures of Africa, the Middle East and South Asia