Elizabeth Urban

Elizabeth Urban
  • Associate Professor of History
  • Department: History
  • Institution: West Chester University of Pennsylvania
  • Email: EUrban@wcupa.edu

Education

  • BA, Religious Studies, Rice University, 2004
  • MA, Near Eastern Languages and Civilizations, The University of Chicago, 2006
  • PhD, Near Eastern Languages and Civilizations, The University of Chicago, 2012

Research Interests

Islamic historyMiddle EastArabic languageslaveryMuslims

Opportunities

Work Study Positions Available: No

Grant Funded Positions Available: No

Course-Credit Research Opportunities Available: No

Volunteer Research Positions Available: No

Biography

Professor Urban (Ph.D. The University of Chicago, 2012) joined the WCU history department in 2014. She has diverse interests in the field of Islamic history, including gender, slavery, and empire. Her recent monograph, Conquered Populations in Early Islam (Edinburgh UP, 2020), examines how new Muslims of slave origins joined the early Islamic community and articulated their identities within it. While she specializes in the medieval period, Dr. Urban also teaches courses on the modern Middle East and contemporary issues in the Islamic world. Prof. Urban has had several opportunities to travel to the Middle East, most recently in Summer 2018, when she traveled to Jordan with a group of West Chester students. She has also studied Arabic in Egypt, Tunisia, and Syria, and she is delighted to share her love of Arabic language, culture, music, and food with students. In addition to studying Arabic texts and preparing new courses in Islamic history, Prof. Urban enjoys cooking Tex-Mex food, rooting for the Houston Astros, and calling people "y'all."

Contact Information

Phone: 610-436-2541

List of Publications

  • Conquered Populations in Early Islam: Non-Arabs, Slaves and the Sons of Slave Mothers. Edinburgh: Edinburgh UP, 2020. “Freedwomen and Kinship in Ibn Sa‘d’s al-Ṭabaqāt al-Kubrā,” Medieval Encounters 30.2–3 (2024): 237–62. “Race, gender and slavery in early Islamicate history,” History Compass 20.5 (April 2022), e12727. https://doi.org/10.1111/hic3.12727 "Gender and Slavery in Islamic Political thought," in The Oxford Handbook of Comparative Political Theory, ed. Murad Idris, Leigh, 2020 "Hagar and Mariya: Early Islamic Models of Slave Motherhood," in Courtesans and Concubines in Islamic History, ed. Matthew Gordon (Oxford UP, 2017) “Humble in Word and Body: Abu Bakra as an Early Islamic Exemplar,” Interdisciplinary Humanities, Spring Issue 2013