ÌýOffice: Armory 203C
Nabil Echchaibi is professor of media studies and director of the Center for Media, Religion and Culture at the University of Colorado Boulder. His research and teaching focus on media, religion, and the politics and poetics of Muslim visibility. He is the author of Voicing Diasporas: Ethnic Radio in Paris and Berlin Between Culture and Renewal and the co-editor of International Blogging: Identity, Politics and Networked Publics (Peter Lang); Media and Religion: The Global View (De Gruyter); and The Thirdspaces of Digital Religion (Routledge).
His scholarly work has appeared in various journals and in many book volumes. His opinion columns have been published in The Guardian, Forbes, Al-Jazeera, Salon, LatinoRebelÌý²¹²Ô»å Religion Dispatches and in publications in France and Morocco.
Echchaibi is currently writing his book, Unmosquing Islam, Media and Fugitive Muslimness, which calls into view the blackmail of a regime of transparency that governs the visibility of Muslims and reclaims the lived experience of Muslimness by insisting on its fugitivity and instability away from an imaginary of enmity and fixed ontology.
He teaches courses on media and globalization; sports and media; critical theory, communication, and media; decoloniality and media studies; and race, diasporaÌý²¹²Ô»å media.
He is the co-editor of the journal Cultural Studies.
Echchaibi previously taught at the University of Louisville, Indiana University-Bloomington, and Franklin College in Switzerland, where he helped set up the international communication department. He served as founding department chair of Media Studies until the fall of 2020.
He holds a BA in English from Mohammed V University in Rabat, Morocco, an MA in JournalismÌý²¹²Ô»å a PhD in Media Studies from Indiana University Bloomington.