Nathaniel Greenberg

Nathaniel Greenberg
Associate Professor
MENA studies; comparative literature; discourse analysis; film&media
Nathaniel Greenberg is an Associate Professor of Arabic in the Department of Modern and Classical Languages at George Mason University. His most recent book is How Information Warfare Shaped the Arab Spring: The Politics of Narrative in Tunisia and Egypt (Edinburgh 2019). A Comparative Literature scholar by training, Professor Greenberg's research and teaching examine the intersection of technology, politics, and literature in the modern Middle East and North Africa. Professor Greenberg is a member of Screen Cultures and the University’s M.A. program in Middle East and Islamic Studies program. In 2015, he created Mason's first B.A concentration in Arabic and from 2021-2024 he was the principal investigator of Project GO, a $1,3 million grant from the Institute for International Education and DLNSEO to train select ROTC students from across the country in critical languages and intercultural communication skills. In addition to his peer-reviewed research, Professor Greenberg's writing and reporting has appeared in The Seattle Times, Jadaliyya, The Los Angeles Review of Books, The Conversation, and Euronews. In 2024, he became Senior Fulbright Scholar to Spain where he completed a new book concerning American public diplomacy.
Current Research
Disinformation operations in Arabic; RT Arabic; American public diplomacy post-9/11
The Social Media Wars and Political Reconciliation in #Libya, #Sudan
Selected Publications
Books
The Long War of Ideas: American Public Diplomacy in Arabic after 9/11, Columbia University Press. Forthcoming.
How Information Warfare Shaped the Arab Spring: The Politics of Narrative in Tunisia and Egypt, Edinburgh University Press. 2019.
Islamists of the Maghreb (co-author). London, U.K.: Routledge. 2018.
The Aesthetic of Revolution in the Film and Literature of Naguib Mahfouz (1952-1967), Lanham M.D: Lexington Books. 2014. *Winner of ACLA Helen Tartar Award 2014
Selected Essays
"Russia is Using Propaganda to Make Egypt the Linchpin of its New Cold War with the West." Euronews. March 30, 2023. Read here.
"American Spring: How Russian State Media Translate American Protests for an Arab Audience." The International Journal of Communication. 2021. Read: here
"Islamic State War Documentaries." The International Journal of Communication. 2020. Read: here
"Egypt's Post-2011 Embrace of Russian Style Misinformation." The Middle East Report (MERIP). 2019. Read: here
"Russia Opens Digital Interference Front in Libya." The Middle East Report. 4 Oct 2019. Read: here
"The Gates of Tripoli: Power and Propaganda in Postrevolutionary Libya." The African Yearbook of Rhetoric. 9. 2019, special issue with Alain Badiou and Philippe-Joseph Salazar (Ed.). Read: here
"Russian Influence Operations Extend into Egypt." The Conversation. 12 Feb 2019. Read: here.
"Notes on the Arab Boom: Stasis and Dynamism in the Post-revolutionary Arabic Novel." Studies in the Novel. 51.2. 2019. Read: here.
"Ahmed Khaled Towfik: Days of Rage and Horror in Arabic Science Fiction." Critique: Studies in Contemporary Fiction. 57.2. 2018. Read: here.
"Political Modernism, Jabra, and the Baghdad Modern Art Group." CLCWeb- Comparative Literature and Culture. 12.2. 2010. Read here.
"War in Pieces: AMIA and the Triple Frontier in Argentine and American Discourse on Terrorism." A Contracorriente. 8.1. 2010. Read: here.
Translations
"The Secret Organization" (1982), by Naguib Mahfouz. Banipal: Magazine of Modern Arab Literature. 58. 2017.
Expanded Publication List
Grants and Fellowships
Senior Fulbright Scholar, Spain. 2024
P.I. and Director, Project GO/MASON. 2021-2024
Faculty Fellow, The Center for Humanities Research, George Mason University, Spring 2021
CLS/US State Department Alumni Development Fund, 2018
Mathy Scholar, George Mason University, 2016
CLS/US State Department Alumni Development Fund, 2016
NEH Summer Scholar, American Muslims: History, Culture, and Politics, 2015
Postdoctoral Fellow, North Africa SME (French/Arabic linguist), the Center for Strategic Communication, ASU, 2012-13
Education
Ph.D. Comparative Literature, University of Washington, 2012. Dir.Terri DeYoung.
M.A. Comparative Literature, University of Washington, 2009
B.A. Comparative Literature, City University of New York-Hunter College, 2003.
Recent Presentations
“Washington’s Quixote" (2024). The Binational Fulbright Commission of Spain, Crossing the Straight.
DW Akademie. Invited Panelist. “Russian Disinformation in Arabic: Horizons of Influence.” Berlin, Germany. 9 Mar 2024.
"The Role of Media in the Libyan Revolution" (2021). 10 Year Anniversary. The National Council on U.S.-Libya Relations.
"Dissent, History and Politics in the Modern Middle East: Tunisia's Cyber-dissidents revisited." (2021). Modern Language Association.
"The Gates of Tripoli: power and propaganda in post-revolutionary Libya" (2020). Middle East Studies Association.
"The Social Media Wars in Libya Revisited" (2019). The National Council on U.S.-Libya Relations. Rayburn House, U.S. Capitol. Washington D.C.
"Information Warfare and the Struggle for Democracy: WikiLeaks and the Arab Spring Revisited" (2019). Media in Transition. M.I.T., Cambridge, MA.
"The Social Media Wars in Libya" (2018). The National Council on U.S.-Libya Relations. Rayburn House, U.S. Capitol. Washington D.C.
In the Media
Public Radio International (PRI)
The New Books Network (Podcast interview with Marci Mazzarotto on How Information Warfare Shaped the Arab Spring)
Folha de São Paola (in Portuguese)
Le Devoir (in French)