Duke’s MS in Critical Asian and Middle Eastern Humanities (CAMEH) fuses archival research, field ethnography, and digital humanities. Courses unpack colonial cartographies, platform capitalism, and eco-poetics across regions from Istanbul to Seoul. Language immersion (Arabic, Japanese, Korean, Persian, Turkish, etc.) pairs with VR archives and AI text-mining of imperial edicts. Graduates craft museum exhibits, policy briefs, and PhD proposals grounded in decolonial critique.
Text-mining Ottoman court records on environmental regulation
VR reconstruction of Tokyo 1923 earthquake media coverage
Podcast series on Arab sci-fi and techno-futures
Interactive map of Belt-and-Road cultural heritage sites
AI translation and annotation of Korean feminist manifestos
Digital exhibit on Persian miniatures’ climate symbolism
Crowdsourced oral histories of Uyghur diaspora cuisine
Policy memo on water diplomacy in Tigris-Euphrates basin
Comparative study of anime depictions of nuclear anxiety
Sentiment analysis of Arabic Twitter during Arab Spring anniversaries
Augmented reality tour of Damascus Old City pre-conflict
Blockchain provenance for Afghan manuscript preservation
Machine-vision cataloguing of temple graffiti in Angkor Wat
Ethnographic film on gig-economy riders in Jakarta
Open-access syllabus on decolonizing Asian-Middle East relations
Interrogate histories and reimagine futures across Asia and the Middle East with Duke CAMEH.
Whether it's Machine Learning, Data Science, or Web Development, Collexa is here to support your academic journey.
"Collexa transformed my academic experience with their expert support and guidance."
Computer Science Student
Reach out to us for personalized academic assistance and take the next step towards success.