Eros and Sexuality in Islamic Art Intro PDF
Eros and Sexuality in Islamic Art Intro PDF
Eros and Sexuality in Islamic Art Intro PDF
Eros and Sexuality in Islamic Art presents seven case studies addressing the
topics of eroticism and sexuality in the visual arts of the medieval and early
modern Muslim world. As the first systematic study on these subjects, this
volume fills a notable lacuna in the field of Islamic art history and contributes
to the lively debates on the nature and function of erotic and sexual images
that have featured prominently in broader art-historical discussions in recent
decades.1 Conceived as a reaction to the dominant interpretative paradigms in
the field of Islamic art history, which have been limited to readings of sensual
themes mostly as metaphors of mystical longing and spiritual pursuits, this
collection offers new insights and methodological models that extend our
understanding of erotic and sexual subjects. Through rigorous historical and
cultural contextualization, the articles in this book establish a constructive
scholarly discussion on these long neglected themes. Furthermore, by bringing
to light unknown or little known visual material, in addition to reconsidering
and reinterpreting well-known themes, the chapters demonstrate how arthistorical sources can complement the approaches taken in other disciplines.
The image that appears on the jacket of this book offers an apt point of
departure to outline some of the issues that inspired the present collection of
chapters (Figure 1.1 and Plate 1). Located on the cover of a papier-mch pen
box (qalamdan) produced in early eighteenth-century Iran, the composition
features a sequence of three amorous couples in an idyllic, verdant landscape.2
Although scenes of romance had already appeared in a variety of media by
the time this object was made, the physical intimacy of the protagonists of
this image and their body language communicate something more about
the nature of their relationship. Marked by a series of sensual gestures and
suggestive gazes, moving from flirtatious exchange to overt bodily interaction,
the couples present the more sensuous and physical facets of lovemaking by
rehearsing its key aspects: courtship, seduction, and, ultimately, sexual union.
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Notes
1. Among the most thought-provoking studies that have appeared in the last 20
years are: John R. Clarke, Looking at Lovemaking: Constructions of Sexuality in Roman
Art: 100 B.C.250 A.D. (Berkeley, CA: University of California Press, 1998); Bette
Talvacchia, Taking Positions: On the Erotic in Renaissance Culture (Princeton, NJ:
Princeton University Press, 1999); Timon Screech, Sex and the Floating World:
Erotic Images in Japan, 17001820 (London: Reaktion Books, 1999); Ferdinand
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Bibliography
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Andrews, Walter, and Mehmet Kalpakli. The Age of the Beloveds: Love and the Beloved
in Early-Modern Ottoman and European Culture and Society. Durham, NC: Duke
University Press, 2005.
Aoyagi, Kaoru. Transition of Views on Sexuality in Sufism: Al-Makk, al-Ghazl,
and Ibn al-Arab. Annals of Japan Association for Middle East Studies 22, 1 (2006):
120.
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