Ameen Albert Rihani Explained

Ameen Albert Rihani
Birth Name:Ameen Albert Rihani
Birth Date:July 5, 1942
Birth Place:Beirut, Lebanon
Nationality:Lebanese

Ameen Albert Rihani (born July 5, 1942 in Beirut) is a university professor, scholar and administrator. He is a professor of Arab American literature at Notre Dame University - Louiaze.[1] He was the Vice President of Academic Affairs since 1997. In 2013 he became advisor to the President of NDU and the Secretary General of the Institute of Lebanese Thought.

Early life and education

Rihani earned a BA degree in political science in 1965 and an MA degree in Arabic literature in 1971, both from the American University of Beirut. Later, he earned his Ph.D. in bilingual comparative literature in 1996 from the Lebanese University. Rihani is the nephew of the well-known author Ameen Rihani.[2]

Career

Professor Rihani taught literature, philosophy, education, modern Arab thought at the American University of Beirut and the Lebanese American University. He lectured in these subjects at universities in the United States and the Arab World for the last two decades. Ameen Albert Rihani is the author of seventeen books and a number of journal articles.[3] He has also edited conference proceedings. Rihani has also published analysis and criticism of the work of his uncle Ameen Rihani.[4] [5] [6] He also writes and lectures about Lebanese literature and its effect on western society.[7]

Rihani was appointed in 2014 to be the director of the Institute of Lebanese Thought at Notre Dame University, Lebanon, and has since created a groundbreaking platform of Lebanon's intellectual history.

Membership

Professor Rihani is a member of several international associations, among which are: the Association of College Administration Professionals (ACAP), Virginia; the American Association of School Administrators (AASA); the Association of Lebanese Writers (Itihad Al-Kuttab Al-Lubnaniyeen), Beirut, Lebanon; the Association for Supervision and Curriculum Development (ASCD), Washington D.C.; the Association for the Advancement of International Education (AAIE); the President of the Teachers Association of the International College (TAIC), Beirut, and the President of the Lebanese Youth League, Beirut.

Recognition

The winner of the Suad as-Subah first literary Award for 2003 for his work Forgotten Springs, Rihani was also recognized in 2006 as a distinguished author for his outstanding literary and philosophic work A Train and No Station by the Suad as-Subah Literary Committee. A special entry introduced him in the Encyclopedia of the 21st Century Intellectuals, published in Cambridge, U.K. 2008 [8] In March 2010, Ameen Albert Rihani was chosen among ten other authors from the American University of Beirut for an honorary ceremony in recognition of “his distinguished contributions in the world of literature”. On February 26, 2014, Notre Dame University organized a symposium around the works of Ameen Albert Rihani. Professor Zahia Darwiche Jabbour, the Secretary General of the Lebanese National Commission for UNESCO, among other speakers, highlighted the multicultural intellectual aspect of Rihani's works as an example for scholars of the 21st century.

Books

References

[10] [11]

External links

Notes and References

  1. http://www.lorientlejour.com/article/848962/un-essai-sur-loeuvre-dameen-albert-rihani.html "Un essai sur l’œuvre d’Ameen Albert Rihani"
  2. Book: Nijmeh Hajjar. The Politics and Poetics of Ameen Rihani: The Humanist Ideology of an Arab-American Intellectual and Activist. 30 May 2010. I.B.Tauris. 978-0-85771-816-7. 14–.
  3. Book: Edward Joseph Alam. Doumit Salameh. Boulos Abdulla Sarru. Religion & science interface 2002-2005. 2006. Notre Dame University, Faculty of Humanities, Department of Social and Behavioral Sciences. 978-9953-418-65-0. 9.
  4. Book: Ameen F. Rihani. Ameen Fares Rihani. Critiques in art. 1 September 1999. Librarie du Liban. 978-0-9634349-5-1.
  5. Book: Nathan C. Funk. Betty J. Sitka. Ameen Rihani: Bridging East and West : a Pioneering Call for Arab-American Understanding. 1 January 2004. University Press of America. 978-0-7618-2860-0. 23–.
  6. Book: Alba della Fazia Amoia. Bettina Liebowitz Knapp. Multicultural Writers from Antiquity to 1945: A Bio-bibliographical Sourcebook. 2002. Greenwood Publishing Group. 978-0-313-30687-7. 351–.
  7. Brown, Curtis. "A bicultural classic celebrates its centennial", LAU Magazine & Alumni Bulletin (Summer 2011, Vol. 13), May 3, 2011.
  8. name="Encyclopedia of the 21st Century Intellectuals 2008|
  9. Book: Nouri Gana. The Edinburgh Companion to the Arab Novel in English: The Politics of Anglo Arab and Arab American Literature and Culture. 30 October 2013. Oxford University Press. 978-0-7486-8555-4. 474–.
  10. Book: Publitec Publications. Who's who in Lebanon. 2005. Éditions Publictec.. 9782903188221.
  11. Book: Nadeem N. Naimy. The Lebanese prophets of New York. 1985. American University of Beirut. 9780815660736.