Ari Ariel
Drop-in Hours: by appointment only
Ari Ariel is a historian of the modern Middle East, with a particular focus on Jewish communities in the Arab world and Mizrahi communities in Israel. His interests include ethnic, national, and religious identities, migration, and foodways. His first book, Jewish-Muslims Relations and Migration from Yemen to Palestine in the Late Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries (Brill, 2014), analyzes the impact of local, regional and international events on ethnic relations in Yemen, and on Yemeni Jewish migration patterns. It argues that global transformations, such as improved transportation technologies, the integration of Yemen into the world economic system, and increased transnational contact with non-Yemeni Jews, were the underlying factors provoking Yemeni migration to Palestine.
Dr. Ariel has also published work on the Hummus Wars and on Middle Eastern Jewish foodways, and is the editor-in-chief of NYFoodstory: The Journal of the Culinary Historians of New York.
His current project follows Yemeni Jews as they moved abroad, asking how migration impacted Yemeni culture and identity, and how Yemeni Jews negotiated their interactions with Jewish and Muslim communities in their new homes.
Ari earned a PhD from Columbia University in 2009.
Publications
Books
Articles
- "Foodways and the Ethnicization of Yemeni Identity in Israel" Mashriq & Mahjar Special Issue: Food and Middle East Diasporas 6.2 (2019)
- “Feeding Minds: Using Food to Teach the Arab Israeli Conflict" Teaching the Arab-Israel Conflict ed. Rachel S. Harris (2019): 275-281
- "Mosaic or Melting Pot: The Transformation of Middle Eastern Jewish Foodways in Israel" Global Jewish Foodways ed. Hasia R. Diner (2018): 91-114
- “Colonialism, Collective Violence, and the Jewish Communities of Libya and Yemen” Tema: Journal of Judeo-Yemenite Studies 12.1 (2012)
- “Ethnic Diversity in Israel”
- “The Hummus Wars”
- Middle East
- Jewish