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Hartford Seminary

FACULTY

INGRID MATTSON
Curriculum Vitae

CONTACT  

Hartford Seminary
77 Sherman Street 
Hartford, CT 06105
phone: 860-509-9531
fax: 860-509-9539
imattson@hartsem.edu

PRESENT POSITION

Professor of Islamic Studies, Director of Islamic Chaplaincy and Associate Editor of The Muslim World at the Macdonald Center for Islamic Studies and Christian-Muslim Relations at Hartford Seminary, Hartford, CT since 1998. 

EDUCATION

University of Chicago, Ph.D., Islamic Studies, 1999

University of Waterloo, B.A. (joint honors), Philosophy & Fine Arts, 1987

TEACHING EXPERIENCE

Professor, Hartford Seminary, 1998-current.

Masters level courses taught include: Introduction to Islamic Law, Contemporary Islamic Ethics, Islamic Ritual and Family Law, The Life of the Prophet Muhammad, Early Islamic History, The Qur’an and its Place in Muslim Society, Introduction to Hadith Literature, Readings in Arabic Texts, Readings in Islamic Theology, The Spirituality of Muslim women, Building Abrahamic Partnerships (co-taught).

Visiting Professor, Osgoode Law School, Toronto, Winter 2003

Taught intensive 3-credit course, Legal Values:  Introduction to Islamic Law

Lecturer, Oriental Institute, the University of Chicago, 1997

Developed and taught course on “Early Islamic Culture” to Institute members.

Teaching Assistant, “Islamic Civilization,”

Dept. of Near Eastern Languages and Civilizations, the University of Chicago, 1995.

Teaching Assistant, “Elementary Arabic,”

Dept. of Near Eastern Languages and Civilizations, the University of Chicago, 1994-1995.


PUBLICATIONS 

The Story of the Qur’an: Its History and Place in Muslim Life, (Blackwells, 2007).

A Believing Slave is Better than an Unbeliever: Status and Community in Early Islamic Society and Law, 1999 University of Chicago doctoral dissertation.

“Debating Form and Function in Muslim Women’s Leadership,” in Sisters: Women, Religion and Leadership in Christianity and Islam, ed. Scott Alexander (Sheed and Ward, forthcoming). A slightly different edition, entitled, “Can a Woman be an Imam: Debating Form and Function in Muslim Women’s Leadership” is available on the Hartford Seminary website: www.hartsem.edu .

“Women, Gender and Family Law: Early period 7th-late 18th centuries,” in Encyclopedia of Women in Islamic Cultures, v. 2 , ed. Suad Joseph (Leiden and Boston: Brill, 2005).

“Adoption and Fostering,” in Encyclopedia of Women in Islamic Cultures, v. 2, ed. Suad Joseph (Leiden and Boston: Brill, 2005).

“Stopping Oppression: an Islamic Obligation,” in September 11: Historical, Theological and Social Perspectives, eds. Ian Markham and Ibrahim Abu-Rabi’ (Oxford: Oneworld Publications, 2002).

“Mosques and Islamic Religious Organizations,” in The Encyclopedia of Women and Religion in North America, (Leiden: Brill, 2005).

“How Muslims use Islamic paradigms to define America,” in Religion and Immigration: Christian, Jewish and Muslim Experiences in the United States, eds. John L. Esposito, Yvonne Y. Haddad and Jane I. Smith (Altimira Press, 2003).

“Status-Based Definitions of Need in Early Islamic Zakat and Maintenance Laws,” in Concepts of Poverty and Charity in Middle Eastern Contexts, eds. Michael Bonner, Mine Ener and Amy Singer (SUNY Press, 2003): 31-51.

“Hunayn,” in The Encyclopedia of the Qur’an, ed. Jane Dammen McAuliffe (Leiden: Brill, 2001).

“Manual Labor’” in The Encyclopedia of the Qur’an, ed. Jane Dammen McAuliffe (Leiden: Brill, 2001).

“Forgiveness and Enemies—Qur’an 60:7-9,” in Peace Skills (Leaders Guide), eds. Alice Frazer Evans and Robert Evans with Ronald S. Kraybill (San Francisco: Jossey-Bass, 2001).

BOOK AND CONFERENCE REVIEWStop

Rebellion and Violence in Islamic Law by Khaled Abou El Fadl (Cambridge University Press, 2001); published in The Muslim World (Fall, 2005).

Review of al-Mawardi’s al-Ahkam al-Sultaniyya (The Ordinances of Government) for The Journal of Law and Religion (Fall, 2001).

Review of Wilfred Madelung, The Succession to Muhammad: A Study of the Early Caliphate in The Journal of Religion, April,1998.

Review of Yale Law School Conference, “Law, Culture and Human Rights: Islamic Perspectives in the Contemporary World,” in The American Journal of Islamic Social Science, 11/3 (Fall 1994): 446-450.

Review of the Yale University Conference, “Islamic Law and Religion,” in The American Journal of Islamic Social Sciences, 10/4 (Winter 1993): 575-578.

GENERAL INTEREST AND WEB-PUBLISHED MATERIAL

NPR, Where We Live, January 2008 http://www.cpbn.org/?q=node/1082

“Discovering (not uncovering) the Spirituality of Muslim Women,” Zion’s Herald, July/August 2005: http://macdonald.hartsem.edu/spiritualityofmuslimwomen.pdf

“Eating in the Name of God,” published on website of the Macdonald Center for Islamic Studies and Christian-Muslim Relations, Hartford Seminary: http://macdonald.hartsem.edu/articles.htm#mattson.

“The Axis of Good: Muslims Building Alliances with other Communities of Faith,” published on the website of the Macdonald Center for Islamic Studies and Christian-Muslim Relations, Hartford Seminary: http://macdonald.hartsem.edu/articles.htm#mattson.

“Spain and Islam: a stormy history,” The Hartford Courant, March 21, 2004.

“Dignity and Patient Care: an Islamic Perspective,” in The Yale Journal for Humanities in Medicine, published on the web-site July 17, 2002. http://info.med.yale.edu/intmed/hummed/yjhm/archives/spirit2003/dignity/imattson.htm

“Finding the Prophet in His People,” published December 18, 2002 on PBS web-site in conjunction with lauch of documentary, Muhammad: Legacy of a Prophet http://www.pbs.org/muhammad/essays/mattson.html.

“Muhammad Still Worthy of Emulation without Visualization,” Dallas Morning News, November 9, 2002.

“Finding the Voice of Islam,” in From the Ashes: Spiritual Responses to the Attack on America, ed. by Beliefnet, Neale Donald Walsch and Desmond Mpilo Tutu (Rodale Press, 2001); another version of the article, “American Muslims’ Special Obligation,” in Taking Back Islam: American Muslims Reclaim Their Faith, eds. Michael Wolfe and the Producers of Beliefnet (Rodale Inc. and Beliefnet, 2002).

“Justice in Islam,” Hartford Courant, October 21, 2001.

“Islamic Law is Not the Monolithic Thing that Many Imagine,” Dallas Morning News, November 17, 2001.

SELECTED SCHOLARLY PRESENTATIONS

“Knowing and Not-Knowing: the Psycho-Spiritual State of the Muslim Ethicist,” Pennsylvania State University, December, 2006.

“Heaven’s Gate: How Muslim Women Open or Close Doors for their Sisters,” St. Xavier University, Chicago, November, 2006.

“Exploring the Dynamics of Militant Extremism,” NORAD-USNORTHCOM conference, Colorado Springs, CO, February, 2005.

"Representing Orthodoxy: Muslim Chaplains and Expert Witnesses at the intersection of Political and Religious authority," Russell Lecture, Tufts University, March, 2005.

“Creativity and Ijtihad,” at the United States Institute of Peace, Washington, DC, March, 2004.

“The Risks and Benefits of Resorting to ‘Necessity’ in Islamic Jurisprudence,” 2003 Or Emet lecture, Osgoode Law School, York University, Toronto, Canada, January 27, 2003.

“Muslim Women and Islamic Law: Possibilities, Limits and Challenges,” William S. Boyd School of Law, University of Nevada at Las Vegas, April 10, 2002.

“The Best of Intentions: the Politics of Foreign Aid for Afghan Women Refugees,” University of Illinois at Chicago, March 8, 2002..

“Gender and Authority in Islam,” Depauw University, Indiana, October 11, 2001.

“Al-Ma`ruf: Revelation’s Sanction of Customary Standards,” paper presented at the Middle East Studies Annual Meeting, Orlando, FL, November, 2000.

“Issues for Muslim Women,” lecture at the University of Westminster, London, conference on “Islamism, Pluralism and Civil Society,” April, 1999 (transcript published in Islam 21).

“Between al-Shafi`i and Abu Dharr: Islamic Law and Ethics on the Status of Slaves,” lecture at the Harvard Law School, workshop on “Egalitarianism and Islamic Law,” April, 1999.

“Slave Mothers: The Process of the Legal Recognition of the Status of the Umm Walad in Early Islamic Society,” paper presented at the Chicago Humanities Institute, 1997.

“Islamic Calligraphy: Sacrality and Identity,” lecture at the Chicago Cultural Institute, 1997.

“What ‘Umar ibn al-Khattab Ate (Symbolic Poverty in Early Islamic Society),” paper presented at the Annual Meeting of the Middle East Studies Association, 1996.

“The Sufriyya in History and Heresiography,” paper presented at the Annual Meeting of the Middle East Studies Association, 1994.

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COMMUNITY SERVICE AND RELATED EXPERIENCE

  • President, Islamic Society of North America (2006-present)
  • Vice-President, Islamic Society of North America (2001-2006)
  • Board of Directors, Nawawi Foundation, Chicago, IL (2000-present)
  • Advisor to PBS film project, Muhammad: Legacy of a Prophet (2001-2002)
  • Board of Directors, Universal Elementary and High School, Bridgeview, IL 1995-1996
  • Advisor to the Afghan delegation at the United Nations Commission on the Status of Women, thirty-ninth session, New York, March 15—April 4, 1995
  • Director of Projects for Afghan Refugee Women (CIDA grant), Peshawar, Pakistan, 1987-1988
  • Gives frequent public lectures on Islam at religious and educational institutions; often consulted as expert in the field by print, radio and television media

ACADEMIC AWARDS AND FELLOWSHIPS

Chicago Humanities Institute, Sawyer Seminar on Religion, Law and the Construction of Identities, Graduate Fellowship, 1996-1997
Milners America Scholarship, 1995-1996
American Association of University Women, International Fellowship, 1993-1994
University of Chicago Century Scholarship, 1989-1992
University of Waterloo, Dean’s List, 1987
University of Waterloo, Art History Essay Award, 1986
University of Waterloo, French Department, Prix d’excellence, 1985

LANGUAGES

Arabic: excellent reading knowledge; good speaking ability.
French: excellent reading knowledge; fair speaking ability.

PROFESSIONAL MEMBERSHIPS

Middle East Studies Association
American Academy of Religion
Middle East Medievalists