澳门六合彩开奖记录

澳门六合彩开奖记录 cookie policy

We use cookies on reading.ac.uk to improve your experience, monitor site performance and tailor content to you

Read our cookie policy to find out how to manage your cookie settings

Dina Rezk

Dina Rezk portrait

Well-being, Inclusion, Diversity and Equality (WIDE, School Lead) 

Areas of interest

Middle East studies, politics, popular culture, masculinity, security, intelligence, trauma, health humanities 

Postgraduate supervision

I have supervised a range of doctoral students on topics including:

  • Palestinian activism through children鈥檚 literature in the 1970s
  • Muslim Brotherhood propaganda post-2011
  • Socialization through imperial board games
  • Anglo-American soft power towards Iran in the post-war period

Students interested in exploring politics, popular culture, historical memory or security studies please get in touch.

  

Teaching

Teaching

Undergraduate Teaching

  • Orientalism: Western Imaginaries of the Middle East (Part 1)
  • Reform and Revolt in the Modern Middle East (Part 2)
  • Politics and Popular Culture: Egypt since 2011 (Part 3)

Research centres and groups

  

Research projects

1)AHRC funded PhD leading to monograph: The Arab World and Western Intelligence: Analysing the Middle East 1958-1981 

2) Co-Investigator for collaborative AHRC-funded project, ‘Politics and Popular Culture: Contested Narratives of the 25 January 2011 Revolution and its Aftermath’ from 2016-2020, creating a digital archive for researchers 

3) Leverhulme funded project on presidential masculinity titled: ‘Virtue, Violence and Virility: Making Egypt’s Presidents’

 

Background

My research has always been concerned with contemporary questions at the intersection of security, authority and culture. I received my Ph.D from Cambridge University in 2013 and subsequently spent two years at the Politics Department in Warwick University as a Teaching Fellow in Intelligence and Security. I was appointed at the 澳门六合彩开奖记录 in 2015 and have a particular interest in public engagement and communicating with non-academic audiences.

 

Academic qualifications

  

PhD, Cambridge University, 2013

M-Phil, Cambridge University, 2006

BA, Cambridge University, 2005 

Awards and honours

2020-2021: Leverhulme Research Fellowship, ‘ Virtue, Violence and Virility: Making Egypt's Presidents’
2019:
AHRC/BBC New Generation Thinker (NGT) Award.
2018: Book Prize, Best ECR output in Arts and Humanities, Reading University.
2017-2019:
British Academy Rising Star Award, ‘Social listening’ in the Humanities: developing qualitative methods to understand digital cultures in the past, present and future’
2017:
Building Outstanding Impact Support Programme (BOISP) Award, Reading University
2016-19:
Co-Investigator on AHRC Research Grant, 'Politics and Popular Culture in Egypt: Contested Narratives of the 25 January Revolution and its Aftermath'
2006-9: Fully Funded
AHRC Doctoral Award (Fees and maintenance), 'Anglo-American political and intelligence assessments of Egypt and the Middle East from 1957-1977’

Professional bodies/affiliations

  

-Member of AHRC Peer Review College

-Reviewer for British Academy Knowledge Frontiers funding scheme

-Editor for Intelligence Studies journal

-Editor for series on Middle East Intelligence with Cambridge University Press

-Member of the British Society for Middle Eastern Studies (BRISMES) Programme Committee

-Member of the International Studies Association (ISA), Intelligence Studies Section, ‘Best Student Paper Award’ Committee 

Selected publications

  

2022 ‘Egypt’s grand strategies: from Gamal Abdel Nasser to Abdel Fatah el-Sisi’ in Clive Jones, Anoush Ehteshami and Tore Peterson (eds.) Grand Strategies in the Middle East, Cambridge University Press.

2021 Co-edited with Nicola Pratt and Dalia Mostafa, ‘Politics and Popular Culture in the Middle East and North Africa: Beyond Domination and Resistance’ special issue of British Journal of Middle Eastern Studies, vol 48.

2020 ‘Egypt’s revolutionary year: regime consolidation at home, pragmatism abroad and neutralism in the Cold War’ in Jeffrey Karam (ed.) 1958: A Revolutionary Year. Bloomsbury Academic.

Consultancy and Media Work

As a Fellow for the Cambridge Security Initiative since 2013, I have consulted for a range of national and international government bodies including the UK Cabinet Office and Ministry of Defence, The United States European Command and NATO, alongside the business community. 

I am a regular contributor to BBC Radio 3 and Radio 4 and commentate on Middle East affairs in a range of international media such as France 24 and Al Jazeera.

A sample of media work includes:

Publications

Loading your publications ...