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Our Team

Dr Cristina Moreno-Almeida

Principal Investigator

Cristina Moreno-Almeida holds the position of Senior Lecturer in Digital Culture and Cultural Studies at Queen Mary University of London and is also a Fellow at the Queen Mary Institute for the Humanities and Social Sciences. Her research delves into digital cultures and cultural production, exploring the intersection of aesthetics, politics, and media, with a specific focus on North Africa and the Middle East. She has published works on various aspects of popular culture, such as rap music and memes, as well as topics related to resistance, nationalism, and online Far-Right cultures. In her book Rap Beyond Resistance: Staging Power in Contemporary Morocco (Palgrave, 2017), she challenges prevailing narratives about cultural resistance within Hip Hop culture in the Arabic-speaking world. Additionally, her upcoming book, Memes, Monsters, and the Digital Grotesque (Oxford University Press, 2024), presents a novel approach to studying informal politics, monstrous aesthetics, and digital media. Currently, Dr. Moreno-Almeida serves as the Principal Investigator of the ERC project ‘Digital Al-Andalus: Radical Perspectives Of and Through Al-Andalus’ (2023-2028). This project explores the amalgamation of historical events, politicized narratives, nostalgia for lost empires, cultural diversity, and violent actions in the realm of digital media. Programme director of the MA Digital Media and Global Cultures at QMUL. For more information: cristinamorenoalmeida.com https://www.qmul.ac.uk/arts/people/academic-and-research-staff/modern-languages-and-comparative-literature/cristina.html

Dr Irene Fernández Ramos

Postdoctoral Research Assistant

Irene Fernández Ramos is a Digital Cultural Studies scholar. Her work sits at the intersection of digital cultures, folklore studies, queer and affect theory. Her current book project examines how tradition and folklore function as affective infrastructures for navigating political, ecological and social crisis in contemporary Spanish music. She completed her PhD at SOAS as a La Caixa fellow, where her dissertation Performing Immobility: The Individual-Collective Body and the Representation of Confined Subjectivities in Contemporary Palestinian Theatre examined how restrictions on movement reshape representations of individual and collective identity in theatre and performance. This work informs her ongoing interest in how cultural forms mediate relationships to the past and enable the articulation of collective futures in contexts of crisis. Her research has appeared in the Journal of Intercultural Studies, Jerusalem Quarterly and Commonwealth Essays and Studies, among other journals. Irene has also served as an expert in cultural innovation for the Creative Europe programme (2018-2020) and as a research evaluator for the Marie Skłodowska-Curie Actions (2021–present). She worked as a project associate on the UNESCO EU-funded initiative supporting evidence-based policy making to enhance the contribution of creative sectors and industries to sustainable development. She is a member of the Association of Women in Spanish, Portuguese, and Latin American Studies (WISPS) and has been part of the Memory Studies Association and the Centre for Palestinian Studies (SOAS), as well as a member of the AHRC-funded research project “Imagining Jerusalem”.

Dr Hanan Natour

Postdoctoral Research Assistant

Hanan Natour is a German-Palestinian scholar of Arabic and Comparative Literature, specialising in modern Arabic literature from the Maghreb and Palestine. In the academic years 2025-27, Hanan was an affiliated Fellow of the programme Europe in the Middle East – The Middle East in Europe (EUME). She obtained her PhD in Arabic and Literary Studies with a thesis on modern Tunisian fiction from Freie Universität Berlin in 2024, co-supervised at the University of Oxford, and completed her first Postdoc at the Cluster of Excellence Temporal Communities: Doing Literature in a Global Perspective, Freie Universität Berlin (2024-25). Her monograph The Tunisian Novel – Narratives of Liberation, Emancipation and Decoloniality is forthcoming (Edinburgh University Press). Together with Mohamed-Salah Omri (University of Oxford) she co-edits the volume Tunisian Literatures – Multilingual Realities, Genealogies, Testimonies (Bloomsbury, 2026). During her PhD, Hanan served as Research Associate to the ERC-funded Digital Humanities project PalREAD – The Reading and Reception of Palestinian Literature from 1948 to the Present where she explored literary networks between the Maghreb, Mashrek and Europe. Her current research builds on this work and explores literary entanglements between Iberia and the Maghreb, adopting a transhistorical approach to narratives of loss and empowerment between Granada and Kairouan.

Melisa Tatiana Slep

Administrative Coordinator

Melisa Tatiana Slep is a PhD candidate in Geography at Queen Mary, University of London. She has a degree in Political Science from Universidad de Buenos Aires (Argentina) and a Master of Science in Development Management from the London School of Economics and Political Science. She has worked for over 13 years in project management and administration for the public sector and NGOs, specialising in funding from international organisations such as the Inter-American Development Bank and the European Union.

Dr Abdenour Padillo-Saoud

Research Associate

Abdenour Padillo-Saoud is a scholar in Arabic and Islamic Studies. He holds a Juan de la Cierva postdoctoral research fellowship at the University of Granada. In 2025, he served as a postdoctoral research assistant on the Digital al-Andalus project, examining video games and history. He was previously a pre-doctoral researcher for five years at the Spanish National Research Council (CSIC) and completed his PhD at the University of Granada. His research focuses on the ways historical narratives are constructed and represented, with particular attention to the Islamic West (Iberian Peninsula and Maghreb). His current work explores the intersection of premodern historiography and contemporary mass media, with a special interest in historical narrative frameworks in modern media and their evolution over time. His publications appear in academic journals and collective volumes, and he actively contributes to knowledge dissemination through conferences, scholarly events, and outreach activities.

Stephanie Amin

Research Assistant (2024-2026)

Stephanie Amin is an independent researcher and filmmaker from Egypt. In 2020, she completed a master’s degree in political science (political sociology) from Paris 1 Pantheon-Sorbonne University. The findings of her dissertation have been published in the 2022 spring issue of the journal Khamasin. Stephanie wrote and directed her first short documentary film “I Found my Love in Massara” in 2022 in the framework of the Creative Documentary workshop organized by Between Women Filmmakers Caravan. The film has been screened in Egypt, the US and France and was awarded for Outstanding direction at Manassat Film Festival (Cairo, 2024). Stephanie has also extensive experience in film festivals’ programming and coordination in Egypt, France and the UK. Stephanie is interested in gender studies, Coptic studies, documentary cinema and digital humanities.
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