Shawkat Toorawa

Shawkat Toorawa's picture
Professor of Arabic Literature

BA 1985, MA 1989, PhD 1998, University of Pennsylvania

Shawkat Toorawa’s scholarly interests include: classical and medieval Arabic literature, especially the literary and writerly culture of Abbasid Baghdad; the Qur’an, in particular hapaxes, rhyme-words, and translation; the Waqwaq Tree and islands; Indian Ocean studies, particularly Creole literatures of Mauritius and the Mascarenes; modern poetry; translation; and SF film and literature.

His books include a study co-authored with the academic alliance RRAALL on autobiography in the Arabic literary tradition; a study of the ninth-century Baghdad bookman Ibn Abi Tahir Tayfur; a critical edition and translation of a collection of long poems by the Syro-Lebanese poet, Adonis (Ali Ahmad Said Esber); a reference work on Arabic Literary Culture from the 6th–10th centuries AD, co-edited with Michael Cooperson; an edited collection of essays on the islands and islanders of the western Indian Ocean; an edited anthology of poetry about New York City; and a critical edition and collaborative translation with the editors of the Library of Arabic Literature of a 12th century work, Consorts of the Caliphs: Women and the court of Baghdad.

He is a Director of the School of Abbasid Studies; a series editor of Resources in Arabic and Islamic Studies; is on the editorial or advisory boards of several journals, including the Journal of Abbasid StudiesJournal of Arabic LiteratureJournal of Qur’anic StudiesMiddle Eastern Literatures, and Quaderni di Studi Arabi; and is an executive editor of the Library of Arabic Literature, an initiative to edit and translate the premodern Arabic literary heritage <https://www.libraryofarabicliterature.org/>.