Description
Book SynopsisIn Orientalism, Eroticism and Modern Visuality in Global Cultures scholars look afresh at representations of nineteenth-century âorientalâ bodies, inquiring deeply into their erotic dimensions, tracing their global dissemination at cross-cultural intersections of the visual and the political. Authors consider the impact of eroticized orientalist representations registered on racial and gendered bodies at historical moments across the globe in the media of photography, painting, prints and sculpture by contextualizing the visual within social practices, ethnography, literature, travel writing and the dynamics of imperialism. Authors examine orientalismâs politico-erotic import across not only imperial Britain and France but also throughout India and the Middle East initiating cross-cultural analyses of orientalism outside of Europe. Works studied include Orientalist and homoerotic works by canonic artists such as Ingres, GÃrÃme, Delacroix and Girodet, and lesser-known artists such as sc
Trade Review’This is an important work. An admirably learned, focused, nuanced volume that follows a theme that is central, but rarely examined in-depth, through a fascinating variety of cultural and geographic locales-from Morocco to India. It should be read by anyone interested in artistic Orientalism and Exoticism, or the complexity and variety of desires they engage.’ Frederick N. Bohrer, Hood College, author of Orientalism and Visual Culture
Table of ContentsList of Illustrations ix
Notes on Contributors xiii
Acknowledgments xvii
1 Introduction: Rethinking Orientalism, Eroticism and Cross-Cultural Visuality 1
Julie Codell and Joan DelPlato
PART I: RACE, ETHNICITY AND THE ABJECT ORIENTAL
2 Menace at the Portal: Masculine Desire and the Homoerotics of Orientalism 25
James Smalls
3 Delacroix’s Invitation to the Jewish Wedding in Morocco 55
Albert Boime
4 Seeing through “The Veil Trick”: Heterotopic Eroticism in Monti’s Sculpture Circassian Slave at the Crystal Palace in 1851 83
Joan DelPlato
PART II: DISCOURSES OF PROJECTION AND CULTURAL CROSS-DRESSING
5 The Conceit of Burton’s Scar: Orientalism as Identity and Transgression 115
Julie Codell
6 Other Desires and the Desire of Others 141
Mary Roberts
PART III: CIRCULATING AND RE-CIRCULATING ORIENTAL EROTICS
7 Sapphism and the Seraglio: Refl ections on the Queer Female Gaze and Orientalism 163
Reina Lewis
8 European Fantasies and Awadhi Aspirations: From a “Turkish” Harem to a Lucknowi Zenana 181
Saleema Waraich
Works