Natalie Khazaal
Associate Professor
- School of Modern Languages
- ADVANCE IAC
Overview
Dr. Natalie Khazaal is an associate professor in the School of Modern Languages at Georgia Tech and the director of the Arabic and Middle East & North Africa programs. She is also an American Council of Learned Societies (ACLS) fellow for her work on Arab atheists. She grew up in Burgas—the largest port city on the Black Sea, and received her doctorate in Near Eastern Languages and Cultures from the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA).
Dr. Khazaal studies how disenfranchisement, media, and language affect each other and has focused on Lebanon, atheists in Arabic-speaking communities, refugees, and non-human animals. Her book, Pretty Liar: Television, Language, and Gender in Wartime Lebanon (Syracuse UP, 2018), is the only study that explores the role of audiences in the development of media legitimacy during violent crises with a focus on Lebanon. Her publications on speciesism in the media—including her co-edited volume on borders and the displacement of human refugees and nonhuman animals, ‘Like an Animal’: Critical Animal Studies Perspectives on Borders, Displacement, and Othering (Brill 2020)—have received international recognition in Spain, Turkey, Australia, Canada, and the US. She has contributed to the topic of atheism with publications on the use of pseudonyms by Arab atheists, on how gender affects the way Arab atheists approach television, and on the embedded atheism in Mohamed Choukri’s literary oeuvre.
Dr. Khazaal has taught classes on Arab culture, media, and globalization that develop students’ critical thinking, curiosity, and cultural tolerance at Georgia Tech, Georgetown University, UCLA, Carleton College, Middlebury College, and Texas A&M. She was the founding faculty advisor for No Lost Generation-Texas, a student initiative that connects with aid organizations, NGOs, governments, and the private sector to help with the global refugee/migrant crisis relief efforts. She was also a founding board member of the Cannon River STEM School, Minnesota. Currently, she is on the board of Ideas Beyond Borders—a non-profit organization that supports young people to think critically about topics ranging from human rights to science and technology, encouraging them to retain their cultural identities but question the status quo and push back against extremism and violence.
She is a guest expert on Court TV https://www.courttv.com; the creator, director, and presentor of the Arabic-language YouTube channel, GenV https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCccacSFWNMbG3jshvxFXqGg; and a consultant for Hollywood (Munich, 2005, dir. Steven Spielberg https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0408306).
- Ph.D. University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA)
Distinctions:
- 2019 Fellow of the ACLS/Luce Program in Religion, Journalism, and International Affairs
- 2020 Faces of Exclusive Excellence Award recipient, Georgia Tech
- 2021 Silver Star Award, Ivan Allen College, Georgia Tech
- 2022 Faculty Excellence Award for research, Ivan Allen College, Georgia Tech
- 2022 Teaching Excellence Award, Georgia Tech
Interests
- Arabic
- Climate Change Mitigation
- Literary and Cultural Studies
- Media Studies
Focuses:
- Africa (North)
- Middle East
- Journalism
- Language and Popular Culture
- Media
- Middle-Eastern Studies
- Migration
Courses
- ARBC-2001: Intermediate Arabic I
- ARBC-2002: Intermediate Arabic II
- ARBC-3005: Contemp Arab Culture: Business Arabic: Advertising
- ARBC-3501: Men-Women In Islam
- ARBC-3813: Special Topics: Arab history on film
- ML-2500: Intro Cross-Cult Studies
- ML-2500: Intro Cross-Cult Studies: Arab history on film
Publications
Recent Publications
Books
- "Like an Animal": Critical Animal Studies Approaches on Borders, Displacement, and Othering
In: Brill
Date: June 2021
- Pretty Liar: Television, Language, and Gender in Wartime Lebanon
Date: 2018
Journal - Editors
- Special Issue on “Religious beliefs, journalism, and international affairs”
In: Religions 13, no.7 [Peer Reviewed]
Date: 2022
Chapters
- “Broadcasting in Lebanon”
In: Mellor, N. Routledge Handbook of Arab Media [Peer Reviewed]
Date: 2020
- “Arab Views of the US Election: Culturally-Positive and Politically-Negative Depictions of US Democracy”
In: Hinck, R., Cooley, S., & Kluver, R., Global Media and Strategic Narratives of Contested Democracy [Peer Reviewed]
Date: 2019
All Publications
Books
- "Like an Animal": Critical Animal Studies Approaches on Borders, Displacement, and Othering
In: Brill
Date: June 2021
- Pretty Liar: Television, Language, and Gender in Wartime Lebanon
Date: 2018
Journal Articles
- “The Cultural Politics of Religious Defiance in Islam: How Pseudonyms and Media Can Destigmatize”
In: Communication and Critical/Cultural Studies 14, no. 3 [Peer Reviewed]
Date: 2017
- “Lobbying against Compassion”
In: American Behavioral Scientist (ABS) 60, no. 3 [Peer Reviewed]
Date: 2016
- “‘An Angry Cow Is Not a Good Eating Experience’”
In: Journalism Studies 15, no. 3 [Peer Reviewed]
Date: 2016
- “Re-evaluating Mohamed Choukri's Autobiography Al-Khubz al-Ḥāfi: The Oppression of Morocco's Amazigh Population, the Ṣaʿālīk, and Backlash”
In: Middle Eastern Literatures 16, no. 2 [Peer Reviewed]
Date: 2013
- “Arab Studies and the Mi‘raj of Post-ACTFL Technologies”
In: Al-Arabiyya Journal [Peer Reviewed]
Date: 2012
Journal - Editors
- Special Issue on “Religious beliefs, journalism, and international affairs”
In: Religions 13, no.7 [Peer Reviewed]
Date: 2022
Chapters
- “Broadcasting in Lebanon”
In: Mellor, N. Routledge Handbook of Arab Media [Peer Reviewed]
Date: 2020
- “Arab Views of the US Election: Culturally-Positive and Politically-Negative Depictions of US Democracy”
In: Hinck, R., Cooley, S., & Kluver, R., Global Media and Strategic Narratives of Contested Democracy [Peer Reviewed]
Date: 2019