ABSTRACT

The history of western notions about Islam is of obvious scholarly as well as popular interest today. This book investigates Christian images of the Muslim Middle East, focusing on the period from the Renaissance to the Enlightenment, when the nature of divine as well as human power was under particularly intense debate in the West.

Ivan Kalmar explores how the controversial notion of submission to ultimate authority has in the western world been discussed with reference to Islam’s alleged recommendation to obey, unquestioningly, a merciless Allah in heaven and a despotic government on earth. He discusses how Abrahamic faiths – Christianity and Judaism as much as Islam – demand devotion to a sublime power, with the faith that this power loves and cares for us, a concept that brings with it the fear that, on the contrary, this power only toys with us for its own enjoyment. For such a power, Kalmar borrows Slavoj Zizek’s term "obscene father". He discusses how this describes exactly the western image of the Oriental despot - Allah in heaven, and the various sultans, emirs and ayatollahs on earth – and how these despotic personalities of imagined Muslim society function as a projection, from the West on to the Muslim Orient, of an existential anxiety about sublime power.

Making accessible academic debates on the history of Christian perceptions of Islam and on Islam and the West, this book is an important addition to the existing literature in the areas of Islamic studies, religious history and philosophy.

chapter |8 pages

Introduction

The Lord: God, King, Father

chapter 1|9 pages

The Obscene Father

Allah, Jehovah, and the oriental despot

chapter 2|12 pages

Orientalism

What has and what has not been said

chapter 3|10 pages

Proto-orientalism

Ancient and medieval views of the East

chapter 4|4 pages

The abduction from Asia

The fall of Constantinople and the beginning of modern orientalism

chapter 5|12 pages

The Turks of Prague

The mundane and the sublime

chapter 6|11 pages

Rembrandt's Orient

Where Earth met Heaven

chapter 7|9 pages

The sublime East

The soft orientalism of Bishop Lowth

chapter 8|12 pages

The sublime is not enough

The hard orientalism of G. F. W. Hegel

chapter 9|6 pages

Letter and Spirit

chapter 10|12 pages

The Lord's command is greater than the Lord

chapter 11|5 pages

The All-Seeing Eye

chapter 12|9 pages

The bad shepherd

Pastoral government and its oriental discontents

chapter 13|9 pages

Sex in Paradise

What suicide fighters die for

chapter |6 pages

Epilogue on the value of submission

A eulogy for soft orientalism