Madiha Tahir

Madiha Tahir is an Assistant Professor of American Studies and the co-director of the Yale Ethnography Hub. She is an interdisciplinary scholar of technology and war with interest and expertise in digital war, surveillance, militarism, and empire and technology studies from below. Her work intersects the anthropology of war with insights from the fields of postcolonial, South Asian, and Black Studies literatures to reframe our understanding of technology, war, and US imperialism. For the 2023–2024 academic year, Tahir is also a Whitney Humanities Faculty Fellow.

Tahir’s current book project explores U.S. drone warfare and transnational militarism in the Pakistan-Afghanistan borderlands. She is currently also pursuing a collaborative, multimodal project on the afterlives of the ‘war on terror’ funded by Columbia University’s Brown Institute for Media Innovation. Tahir is the co-editor of Public Culture’s special issue “Violence and Policing” (2019) and the co-curator, with Adrien Zakar, of Technologies of War, a public humanities virtual series of ongoing conversations on the role of the humanities in the wake of the war(s).

A former journalist, she is the director of Wounds of Waziristan, a short documentary essay film that tracks two drone survivors as they reflect on the afterlife of bombardment. She is also the co-founder of the South Asian bilingual, online journal Tanqeed with Mahvish Ahmad, and the co-editor of Dispatches from Pakistan (University of Minnesota Press).

Before coming to Yale, Tahir was a Mellon Postdoctoral Research Fellow at the Center for Imagination in the Borderlands at ASU. She received her Ph.D. from Columbia University.