Fadwa El Guindi

Guindi, Fadwa El

Guindi, Fadwa El

Retired Anthropologist, the University of California, Los Angeles, USA; Fellow, World Academy of Art & Science

Job Title: 

Retired Anthropologist, the University of California, Los Angeles, USA; Fellow, World Academy of Art & Science

After graduating from AUC with a Bachelor of Arts in political science (cum laude), Fadwa El Guindi ’60 embarked on a long and distinguished career in the field of anthropology. An acclaimed author, documentary filmmaker, anthropologist and scholar with a PhD in anthropology from the University of Texas at Austin, El Guindi has produced international, award-winning visual ethnographies on Arab and Muslim culture, including El Sebou’: Egyptian Birth Ritual, El Moulid: Egyptian Religious Festival and Ghurbal. These films were produced by the U.S.-based El Nil Research, a nonprofit ethnographic laboratory and visual research center founded by El Guindi. As an anthropologist, her research involves fieldwork with Arab, Nubian and Zapotec cultures and Arab-Americans.

A prolific author, El Guindi has more than 80 publications in English, Italian, French, Russian, Arabic, German and Spanish, and serves on the editorial boards of prominent scholarly journals. Her book, Veil: Modesty, Privacy and Resistance, has become an anthropological classic and has been translated into several languages. El Guindi is also author of The Myth of Ritual: A Native’s Ethnography of Zapotec Life Crisis Rituals, where she adopts the innovative methodology of native ethnography. Other groundbreaking anthropological books she has authored include Visual Anthropology: Essential Method and Theory and By Noon Prayer: The Rhythm of Islam.

Past president of the Society for Visual Anthropology, El Guindi previously served as distinguished professor of anthropology and head of the Department of Social Sciences at Qatar University. She was also a professor at the University of California, Los Angeles and taught anthropology at the University of Southern California; University of California, Santa Barbara; and Georgetown University. Her expertise on the Middle East brought her to the Clinton White House, and she frequently gave lectures to diplomats assigned to the Middle East at the Foreign Service Institute of the U.S. Department of State. El Guindi currently lectures internationally and has recently been elected as a fellow of the World Academy of Art & Science.

ARTICLES BY THIS AUTHOR

Can Lack of Leadership Become Transformative?
Get Full Text in PDF Abstract Observers today assume that transformations in society are necessarily linked to leadership. However, anthropologists have dealt with human groups they labeled acephalous (from Greek, meaning headless), characterized by an absence of centralized or hierarchical leadership of any sort. In this ‘idea’ piece, the author observes that it is possible in some situations to delink societal transformations from leadership—centralized, hierarchical, charismatic or...
Revisiting ‘The Arab Spring’
Get Full Text in PDF Abstract The article presents a critical analysis of the imposed construct of ‘The Arab Spring’. It presents an analytic description of a more realistic picture of what happened in the Arab World. There was discontent fomenting among the Arab peoples following what they saw had happened to them, not initiated by them, starting with the US’ invasion of Iraq, resulting in its breakup as a unified nation, the dismantling of its army and its institutions, the killing of its...