Sanaa Riaz
- Assistant Professor of Sociology and Anthropology
Institutional Affiliation
Metropolitan State University of Denver
Department of Sociology
Department of Anthropology
Education
Ph.D., Cultural Anthropology, University of Arkansas
Regional Interests
South Asia
Cultural Studies
Profile
Prior to coming to the Metropolitan State University of Denver, Dr. Sanaa Riaz served as the Program Chair of the Bachelor of Arts in Social Science in Ashford University's College of Liberal Arts. She graduated from the University of Karachi, Pakistan with Bachelor鈥檚 in History and a Master鈥檚 in Archeology and earned her doctorate in Anthropology from the University of Arkansas. Learning and teaching languages being her passion besides Anthropology, she also began pursuing a Master鈥檚 degree in Applied Linguistics from the University of Massachusetts, Boston. Prior to joining Ashford University鈥檚 Denver campus, Dr. Riaz taught at the Mount St. Mary College, New York; Arkansas State University; University of Arkansas; and at undergraduate institutions in Karachi, Pakistan. Dr. Riaz鈥檚 research revolves around issues of modernity, tradition, secularism, and social class in religious practice and the education context. She was trained as a Middle East anthropologist and conducted ethnographic research in urban Pakistan. In her Anthropology classes, Dr. Riaz鈥檚 mission is to encourage students to critically examine their worldviews and socio-economic and political ethos, and bring themselves one step closer to understanding other cultural normalities. Thus, respecting other points of view and challenging one鈥檚 own through academic dialogue is an important feature of her class environment. Dr. Riaz advises her students to read about other cultures as much as possible and to deconstruct the ideologies that drive every activity in their daily lives and of the people around them, whether it鈥檚 watching a movie, celebrating an occasion, going shopping, or communicating.
Selected Publications
2014. New Islamic Schools: Tradition, Modernity and Class in Urban Pakistan. New York: Palgrave Macmillan.