Skip to content

College of Arts and Humanities


Maziyar Faridi

Maziyar Faridi

Assistant Professor, WCIN

Contact
Department of English
Website: https://calendly.com/maziyarfaridi/office-hour
Email: mfaridi@clemson.edu

Education
Ph.D. Comparative Literature, Northwestern University (2020); M.A., Ferdowsi University of Mashhad (2011); B.A., Ferdowsi University of Mashhad (2008)


 

Research Interests
Comparative Modernism; Global Cinema; Poetry and Poetics; Film Theory; Postcolonial Transnational Studies; Critical Theory; Global South; Middle East and North African Literatures and Cinemas

Maziyar Faridi is a scholar of comparative literature and film studies. His research interests include critiques of the sovereign subject in continental philosophy, identity and media, postcolonial transnational studies, and Middle East and North African modern literatures and cinemas. At the intersection of Iranian and global modernism (1922-1979), his current book project traces the emergence of a poetics that resists both colonial modernity and anticolonial recourse to identitarianism. Foregrounding an understudied corpus of Iranian literary and cinematic texts, Faridi argues that in this poetics rests the promise of new forms of political relationality beyond modernity's politics of the sovereign subject. His research has been recognized by several awards, including the Charles Bernheimer Prize for the best dissertation from the American Comparative Literature Association (2020-2021) and the Ferdowsi Tusi Award for outstanding research in Persian literature and culture from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill (2018). He is an alumnus of the Paris Program in Critical Theory, a joint program between Northwestern University and Universite Sorbonne-Nouvelle (Paris III). He holds certificates in Middle East and North African Studies (Northwestern), Critical Theory (Northwestern), and World Literature (Harvard University and City University of Hong Kong). Maziyar is interested in supervising graduate projects broadly on questions of identity politics and sovereignty in media and literature, semiotics and psychoanalysis, the rhetorical foundation of “people,” transnationalism and postcolonial translation studies, and critical theory from the Global South, among others.

College of Arts and Humanities
College of Arts and Humanities | 108 Strode Tower, Clemson, SC 29634