Akbari earned her B.A. from
Johns Hopkins University in 1984. At
Columbia University, she earned an M.A. in English in 1989, an M. Phil. in English and Comparative Literature in 1991, and a Ph.D. in English and Comparative literature in 1995. She began teaching at the University of Toronto in 1995, where she served as a Professor in the Department of English, as well as the Director of the Centre for Medieval Studies from 2013 to 2019. In July 2019, Akbari left the University of Toronto to join the
Institute for Advanced Study. Her second monograph,
Idols in the East (2009), presents a prehistory of
orientalism in which Western Christian medieval writing associated Islam with
idolatry. Later work includes research as a co-Principal Investigator for an
Andrew W. Mellon Foundation grant, "The Book and the Silk Roads," begun in 2019 to study medieval transmission of book technologies along the
Silk Road trade routes between China and Europe. With Filiz Çakır Phillip, she co-curated the exhibition 'Hidden Stories: Books Along the Silk Roads', which ran at the
Aga Khan Museum from October 2021 to February 2022. In 2013, Akbari was an organizer for the grassroots group "Keep Back Campus Green," which sought to block the development of an artificial turf athletic field behind the University of Toronto's
University College buildings, arguing that the
Back Campus Fields ought to be protected as a heritage site. They were unsuccessful. Akbari co-hosts a literary podcast,
The Spouter-Inn, with Chris Piuma, which was nominated in the Outstanding Arts Series of the 2020 Canadian Podcast Awards. Begun in 2019, the podcast consists of unscripted conversations about "great" literature. == Books ==