Amir Hussain

Professor of Theological Studies Loyola Marymount University

  • Los Angeles CA

Bellarmine College of Liberal Arts

Contact

Loyola Marymount University

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Biography

Dr. Amir Hussain is Professor of Theological Studies at Loyola Marymount University in Los Angeles, where he teaches courses on world religions. His own particular speciality is the study of Islam, focusing on contemporary Muslim societies in North America. His academic degrees (BSc, MA, PhD) are all from the University of Toronto where he received a number of awards, including the university’s highest award for alumni service. For 2011 to 2015, Amir is the editor of the Journal of the American Academy of Religion, the premier scholarly journal for the study of religion. He has a deep commitment to students, and holds the distinction of being the only male to serve as Dean of Women at University College, University of Toronto. Before coming to California in 1997, Amir taught courses in religious studies at several universities in Canada. He is active in academic groups such as the Canadian Society for the Study of Religion and the American Academy of Religion. He is on the editorial boards of four scholarly journals, the Journal of Religion, Conflict and Peace; Contemporary Islam: Dynamics of Muslim Life; the Ethiopian Journal of Religious Studies; and Comparative Islamic Studies. Amir is also interested in areas such as religion and music, religion and literature, religion and film and religion and popular culture. In 2008, he was appointed a fellow of the Los Angeles Institute for the Humanities. Prior to his appointment at Loyola Marymount University, Amir taught at California State University, Northridge (CSUN) from 1997 to 2005. Amir won a number of awards at CSUN, both for his teaching and research. In 2001 he was selected for the outstanding faculty award by the National Center on Deafness. For the academic year 2003-04, he was selected as the Jerome Richfield Memorial Scholar. In both 2008 and 2009, Amir was chosen by vote of LMU students as the Professor of the Year. He is the co-editor for the fourth editions of World Religions: Western Traditions, and World Religions: Eastern Traditions, textbooks published in 2014 by Oxford University Press. He is also the co-editor for the third edition of A Concise Introduction to World Religions, published by OUP in 2015. Prior to those books, he wrote an introduction to Islam for North Americans entitled Oil and Water: Two Faiths, One God (Kelowna: Copper House, 2006). He has published over 50 book chapters and scholarly articles about religion.

Education

University of Toronto

B.Sc.

Psychology

University of Toronto

M.A.

Centre for the Study of Religion

University of Toronto

Ph.D.

Centre for the Study of Religion

Areas of Expertise

Interfaith Dialogue
Islam and Muslim Lives in the United States;
Muslim Communities in North America
Religion on Film and Television

Accomplishments

Fellowship at the Institute for Advanced Catholic Studies

Fall 2016, at University of Southern California

Senior Editor for Oxford Handbooks Online: Religion

A new online reference from Oxford University Press, appointed in 2012

Editor, The Journal of the American Academy of Religion

From 2011-2015

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Affiliations

  • Los Angeles Institute for the Humanities

Languages

  • English
  • French
  • Urdu
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Courses

First Year Seminar: Islam and the Building of America

First Year Seminar: Islam and the Building of America

Islam and Interreligious Dialogue

Islam and Interreligious Dialogue

Religion and Film

Religion and Film

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Articles

The Diaspora in the West

Routledge

2008 “The Diaspora in the West”, a chapter in Andrew Rippin, Editor, The Islamic World. London: Routledge, pp. 131-142.

From Tolerance to Dialogue: A Muslim perspective on interfaith dialogue with Christians

Asian Christian Review

2008 “From Tolerance to Dialogue: A Muslim perspective on interfaith dialogue with Christians”, an article in Asian Christian Review, Vol. 2, Nos. 2 & 3, Summer/Winter, pp. 85-97.

Listen to the Dark’: Death and Dying in Music, Film and Literature

Oxford University Press

2008 “‘Listen to the Dark’: Death and Dying in Music, Film and Literature”, a chapter in Christopher M. Moreman, Editor, Teaching Death and Dying. New York: Oxford University Press, pp. 213-226.

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