Sunday, January 4, 2009 - 6:10 PM
The editorial team has asked me to post a brief introduction for those readers not already familiar with Abu Aardvark. I am an associate professor of political science at George Washington University, based in the Elliott School of International Affairs. I teach courses on Middle East politics and international relations theory, co-direct the new Institute for Public Diplomacy and Global Communications, and beginning next year will be the Director of the Institute for Middle East Studies. My most recent book is Voices of the New Arab Public: Iraq, Al-Jazeera, and Middle East Politics Today, and I'm currently writing a book about Islamist movements in the Arab world. In the interest of full disclosure, I also did some policy work for the Obama campaign (and scrupulously avoided blogging about anything on which I was working, against all blogger CW); I have no role on the transition.
I started my Abu Aardvark blog way back in the dark ages of the fall of 2002, as an untenured assistant professor at Williams College writing under a pseudonym. Why an aardvark? Well, staring at a blank Blogger registration page way back in 2002, I had no idea that six and a half years later I would still be doing this and so I didn't actually give much thought to the choice. I just went with "aardvark" because of my longtime devotion to Dave Sim's 300-issue comic book epic Cerebus the Aardvark. The name stuck.
It remained a (thinly disguised) pseudonymous blog until the spring of 2005, when I quietly began blogging under my own name (ironically, during an online debate with my new Foreign Policy colleague Dan Drezner). Since then I've been exploring the boundaries between blogging and academic research, and between blogging and policy work, on a daily basis. It's pretty amazing that I now almost always find myself introduced as "Abu Aardvark" whether I'm speaking to an academic seminar at Princeton with Bernard Lewis nodding along or to a CENTCOM assessment team. Brave new world.
What to expect from this blog? My writing on Middle East politics tends follow my core research interests, and thus to cluster around a few core places (Egypt, Jordan, Iraq, the GCC states) and a few dominant themes:
I am delighted that you are blogging here but could you please use the word 'ironically' correctly:
"ironically, during an online debate with my new Foreign Policy colleague Dan Drezner"
There is nothing ironic about that at all. Ironically with regard to later events means what actually happened was the opposite to what was intended or desired (such as 'Ironically, the Bush Iraq policy has resulted in Iraq becoming an ally of Iran rather than an ally of the USA in opposing Iran.') Ironically does not mean coincidentally or interestingly, both really good words and either correct in this case.
Look forward to reading your thoughts and research findings on the Middle East Marc!
I think 'ironically' well applies in the context.. A pseudonymous blog till Marc starts writing under his own name in an ONLINE debate. Work it out David :)
I am doing my best to work it out, but I just keep failing. You seem to think a funny coincidence is ironic. If that is what you think, fine. Not the traditional meaning of the word, but I am a linguistic descriptivist at heart and will accept new uses. But please at least acknowledge it is a new meaning.
Marc Lynch is associate professor of political science and international affairs at George Washington University.
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