Book contents
- What is “Islamic” Art?
- What is “Islamic” Art?
- Copyright page
- Epigraph
- Contents
- Figures
- Color Plates
- Preface
- Note on Transcultural Communication
- Introduction From Islamic Art to Perceptual Culture
- 1 The Islamic Image
- Chapter 2 Seeing with the Ear
- Chapter 3 The Insufficient Image
- Chapter 4 Seeing with the Heart
- Chapter 5 Seeing through the Mirror
- Chapter 6 Deceiving Deception
- Chapter 7 The Transcendent Image
- Chapter 8 The Transgressive Image
- Chapter 9 Mimetic Geometries
- Chapter 10 Perspectives on Perspective
- Conclusion Out of Perspective
- References
- Index
- Plate Section (PDF Only)
Chapter 2 - Seeing with the Ear
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 27 September 2019
- What is “Islamic” Art?
- What is “Islamic” Art?
- Copyright page
- Epigraph
- Contents
- Figures
- Color Plates
- Preface
- Note on Transcultural Communication
- Introduction From Islamic Art to Perceptual Culture
- 1 The Islamic Image
- Chapter 2 Seeing with the Ear
- Chapter 3 The Insufficient Image
- Chapter 4 Seeing with the Heart
- Chapter 5 Seeing through the Mirror
- Chapter 6 Deceiving Deception
- Chapter 7 The Transcendent Image
- Chapter 8 The Transgressive Image
- Chapter 9 Mimetic Geometries
- Chapter 10 Perspectives on Perspective
- Conclusion Out of Perspective
- References
- Index
- Plate Section (PDF Only)
Summary
In contrast to the dearth of discussions about visual images in the first centuries of Islam, discussions of music abounded, often incorporating discourses inherited from Greek antiquity. Chapter 2 considers how juridical discussions of music reflected antique traditions of inward mimesis. Inheriting aspect of Eastern Roman music theory, discussions generally distinguished between theory and performance, affectivity and entertainment. Inheriting the Pythagorean–Platonic tradition, theorists emphasized the capacity of music to engage with the harmonies between the universe and the body that enabled its therapeutic and curative capacities. Music and instruments could be characterized through an iconography of sound. Music needed to be treated with caution due to its association with forbidden practices such as drinking and licentiousness. Yet it was also recognized as facilitating transcendence by opening the heart to the workings of the divine. Both aspects became central to literary gatherings devoted to the ritualized recitation of poetry with music, wine, food, and real or imaginary gardens. The centrality of music in the Islamic intellectual corpus undermines the oculocentrism of art history, offering instead a field of multimedial perceptual culture.
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- What is 'Islamic' Art?Between Religion and Perception, pp. 57 - 78Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2019
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