Dr. Hanan Toukan
An Associate Professor at the American University of Beirut-Mediterraneo in the Philosophy, Politics and Economics program, her interdisciplinary scholarship bridges art, politics, and postcolonial critique to interrogate dissent and power in the Mediterranean East. Author of The Politics of Art: Dissent and Cultural Diplomacy in Lebanon, Palestine and Jordan (Stanford UP, 2021), she explores how cultural production in the region becomes sites of resistance against colonial violence, state repression, and ecological erasure. Her work traces grassroots artistic practices, migration and transnational solidarity networks in the region and its diasporic communities in Europe that reimagine sovereignty, memory, and collective futures in contested landscapes.
Awarded the Middle East Studies Association’s Malcolm H. Kerr Prize and Alexander von Humboldt Foundation fellowships, her research advances decolonial frameworks for understanding art’s role in larger socio-ecological struggles and how they are vertically and horizontally shaped, aligning with CELME’s commitment to emancipatory knowledge, South-South alliances, and the intersections of cultural resilience and environmental justice