Dr. Sophie Richter-Devroe, Associate Professor in the Middle Eastern Studies Department at the College of Humanities and Social Sciences, during the launch of book and signing event at HBKU.
The College of Humanities and Social Sciences (CHSS) at Hamad Bin Khalifa University (HBKU) recently hosted a book launch, signing and discussion with Dr. Sophie Richter-Devroe, Associate Professor in the Middle Eastern Studies Department at CHSS, who recently authored ‘Women’s Political Activism in Palestine’.
The book traces Palestinian women’s different forms of political activism in peacebuilding, popular resistance, and everyday survival, and explores the intricate dynamics of daily life in Palestine.
The book was awarded the National Women’s Studies Association/University of Illinois Press First Book Prize.
As part of the event, Professor Issam Nassar, a faculty member at Illinois State University and Doha Institute for Graduate Studies, acting as Discussant gave the audience his insights into the topic and contextualised Dr. Richter-Devroe’s research on long-term ethnographic fieldwork in Palestine, Lebanon, Jordan, and Greece.
Speaking after the signing, Dr. Sophie, said: “When we talk about politics, we usually refer to macro-level issues: elections, political parties, unions, etc. In this book I switch focus to the micro, the everyday: How do Palestinian women do politics on a daily basis? My study, which is based on a long-term ethnographic fieldwork in the West Bank and East Jerusalem, shows that in a context such as Palestine, where Israeli policies target the very fine grain of everyday life, so-called ‘ordinary’ activities, such as child-rearing, farming or simply creating an atmosphere of ‘normal’ life, indeed are political. They must be understood and analysed as a form of everyday resistance against Israeli settler-colonisation of Palestinian everyday lives.”
Dr. Richter-Devroe has conducted extensive research on the oral histories, memories, and narratives of women from the often forgotten Palestinian Naqab Bedouin population, and has worked with Dr. Ruba Salih from SOAS University of London on joint research on Palestinian refugees in Jordan, Lebanon, and the West Bank.
More recently, Dr. Devroe has led a research project on Syrian refugees in Italy and Greece, investigating the impact of the Syrian refugee crisis on the family and family-making practices in a transnational context.