El-Badawi taught Arabic at the University of Chicago from 2006 to 2010 and served as a lecturer in religion at Temple University from 2003 to 2005.[2]
He also chaired the Department of Modern and Classical Languages at the University of Houston as Associate Professor and Program Director of Middle Eastern Studies.[3]
Works
The Qur'an and the Aramaic Gospel Traditions (2013)[4]
Queens and Prophets: How Arabian Noblewomen and Holy Men Shaped Paganism, Christianity and Islam (2022)[5]
Female Divinity in the Qur’an: In Conversation with the Bible and the Ancient Near East (2024)
Rebecca R. Williams, Middle East Media and Book Reviews Online 2.6 (2014)
^Reviews of Queens and Prophets: How Arabian Noblewomen and Holy Men Shaped Paganism, Christianity and Islam (2013):
de Jarmy, Adrien (2024). "Emran Iqbal El-Badawi, Queens and Prophets. How Arabian Noblewomen and Holy Men Shaped Paganism, Christianity and Islam". Bulletin critique des Annales islamologiques (38). doi:10.4000/bcai.5020. ISSN0259-7373.