![Photo of Professor Nahyan Fancy](http://intranet.exeter.ac.uk/emps/includes/staff_profiles_api/userimage_blank.gif)
Professor Nahyan Fancy
Al-Qasimi Professor in Islamic Studies
Overview
I am an historian of science and medicine who focuses on Islamic societies during the period from 1000-1500. I am particularly interested in the intersections of science, medicine, philosophy and religion in Arabic (and increasingly Persian) works from this period.
I received my PhD in History and Philosophy of Science from the University of Notre Dame, Indiana (USA), my M.A. in the same area from the University of Toronto (Canada), and my B.A. in Mathematics and Biochemistry from Knox College, Illinois (USA).
My current projects include: 1. an examination of 8 Arabic medical commentaries produced on the Canon of Medicine and its abridgment between 1170 and 1520; 2. medical and religious understandings of plague; 3. medical understandings of sleep and their intersections with philosophy and religion; and 4. medical and religious understandings of fetal generation, including notions of fertility/infertility, ensoulment and gender identity.
I am happy to supervise students broadly interested in the history of science, history of medicine, and science and religion issues in Islamic societies, ideally in the period before 1600, but depending on the topic and the region (e.g. South Asia), even as late as the early twentieth century.
I currently serve as the Book Review Editor for Islamic Studies for Speculum: A Journal of Medieval Studies, and serve on the Editorial board of the journal, Medical History. I also serve as the Secretary of the Commission on the History of Science and Technology in Islamic Societies.
I tweet under the name: @FancyNahyan
Publications
Copyright Notice: Any articles made available for download are for personal use only. Any other use requires prior permission of the author and the copyright holder.
| 2023 | 2022 | 2021 | 2020 | 2019 | 2018 | 2017 | 2016 | 2013 | 2009 | 1999 |
2023
- Fancy N, Brentjes S, Tekin K. (2023) Systems of Knowledge: Debating Organization and Changing Relationships, Routledge Handbook on the Sciences in Islamicate Societies: Practices from the 2nd/8th to the 13th/19th Centuries, Routledge, 761-772.
- Fancy N. (2023) Medical Commentaries, Handbook on the Sciences in Islamicate Societies: Practices from the2nd/8th to the 13th/19th Centuries, Routledge, 436-446.
- Fancy N, Stearns J, Brentjes S, Şen AT, Trigg S, Gardiner N, VarlıkRutgers N, Melvin-Koushki M, Haq SN. (2023) Current debates and emerging trends in the history of science in premodern Islamicate societies, History of Science, volume 61, no. 2, pages 123-178, DOI:10.1177/00732753231154690. [PDF]
- Fancy N. (2023) The Science of Sleep in Medieval Arabic Medicine, Chest, volume 163, no. 4, pages 916-920, DOI:10.1016/j.chest.2022.12.005. [PDF]
- Fancy N. (2023) The Science of Sleep in Medieval Arabic Medicine, Chest, volume 163, no. 3, pages 662-666, DOI:10.1016/j.chest.2022.11.007. [PDF]
2022
- Fancy N. (2022) Knowing the Signs of Disease: Plague in the Arabic Medical Commentaries Between the First and Second Pandemics, Death and Disease in the Medieval and Early Modern World Perspectives from Across the Mediterranean and Beyond, Boydell & Brewer, 35-66.
2021
- Fancy N, Green MH. (2021) Plague and the Fall of Baghdad (1258), Medical History, volume 65, no. 2, pages 157-177, DOI:10.1017/mdh.2021.3. [PDF]
2020
- Fancy N. (2020) Verification and Utility in the Arabic Commentaries on the Canon of Medicine: Examples from the Works of Fakhr al-Dīn al-Rāzī (d. 1210) and Ibn al-Nafīs (d. 1288), Journal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences, volume 75, no. 4, pages 361-382, DOI:10.1093/jhmas/jraa038. [PDF]
2019
- Fancy N. (2019) Galen and Ibn al-Nafīs, Brill's Companion to the Reception of Galen, Brill, 263-278.
2018
- Fancy N. (2018) Medicine and Religious Scholarship, 1001 Cures: Contributions in Medicine and Healthcare from Muslim Civilisation, FSTC, 176-185.
- Fancy N. (2018) Anatomy, 1001 Cures: Contributions in Medicine and Healthcare from Muslim Civilisation, FSTC, 42-51.
- Fancy N. (2018) Post-Avicennan Physics in the Medical Commentaries of the Mamluk Period, Intellectual History of the Islamicate World, volume 6, no. 1-2, pages 55-81, DOI:10.1163/2212943x-00601007. [PDF]
- Fancy N. (2018) Generation in Medieval Islamic Medicine, Reproduction Antiquity to the Present Day, Cambridge University Press, 129-140.
2017
- Fancy N. (2017) Womb Heat versus Sperm Heat: Hippocrates against Galen and Ibn Sīnā in Ibn al-Nafīs’s Commentaries, Oriens, volume 45, no. 1-2, pages 150-175, DOI:10.1163/18778372-04501003. [PDF]
2016
- Fancy N. (2016) The Medieval Islamic Hospital: Medicine, Religion, and Charity, Ahmed Ragab, Nazariyat İslam Felsefe ve Bilim Tarihi Araştırmaları Dergisi (Journal for the History of Islamic Philosophy and Sciences), volume 3, no. 1, pages 137-146, DOI:10.12658/nazariyat.3.1.r0001. [PDF]
2013
- Fancy N. (2013) Medical Commentaries: A Preliminary Examination of Ibn al-Nafīs’s Shurūḥ, the Mūjaz and Subsequent Commentaries on the Mūjaz, Oriens, volume 41, no. 3-4, pages 525-545, DOI:10.1163/18778372-13413412. [PDF]
- Fancy NAG. (2013) Science and Religion in Mamluk Egypt Ibn Al-Nafis, Pulmonary Transit and Bodily Resurrection.
2009
- Fancy N. (2009) The Virtuous Son of the Rational: A Traditionalist’s Response to the Falāsifa, Avicenna and His Legacy A Golden Age of Science and Philosophy, Brepols Publishers, 219-247.
1999
- Fancy N, Mehl AF. (1999) Examining the Rate of Renaturation for Genomic DNA Isolated from E. coli: An Integrated Physical Biochemistry Laboratory, Journal of Chemical Education, volume 76, no. 5, pages 646-646, DOI:10.1021/ed076p646. [PDF]
Biography
I belong to the Kutiyana Memon community. My parents migrated to Karachi, Pakistan at partition, but originally are from Junagadh, India (the princely state whose composition and rule was the mirror-image of Kashmir). I was born and raised in Dubai and Abu Dhabi, in the United Arab Emirates where I completed my (I)GCSEs and A'Levels.
I received a liberal arts education at Knox College, majoring in Mathematics and Biochemistry. Upon graduation, I returned to Knox as a post-baccalaureate fellow, undertaking research in the history of calculus, biochemistry pedagogy (DNA renaturation) and Islamic philosophy, while I contemplated what course to pursue for post-graduate study. Having fallen in love with history of calculus, philosophy of science and Islamic philosophy, I decided to pursue an MA in the History and Philosophy of Science at the University of Toronto, where I wrote my thesis on the 17th century mathematician, Isaac Barrow and his geometrical method of finding tangents. I then moved to the University of Notre Dame for my PhD in the area, writing a thesis on the thirteenth century physician, Ibn al-Nafis, and situating his discovery of the pulmonary transit of blood within his social and intellectual context.
I was lucky to receive a tenure-track offer in the History department of DePauw University (Indiana, USA) during the final year of my dissertation (2006). I remained on the faculty at DePauw, even serving as the Faculty Development Coordinator (2017-2020), until August 2023, when I joined the faculty at the Institute of Arab and Islamic Studies.