Front cover image for The Homoerotics of Orientalism

The Homoerotics of Orientalism

The place of the Middle East in European heterosexual fantasy is well documented in the works of Edward Said and others, yet few have considered the male Anglo-European (and, later, American) writers, artists, travelers, and thinkers compelled to represent what, to their eyes, seemed to be an abundance of erotic relations between men in the Islamicate world. Whether feared or desired, the mere possibility of sexual contact with or between men in the Middle East has covertly underwritten much of the appeal and practice of the enterprise of Orientalism, frequently repeating yet just as often upending its assumed meanings. Traces of this undertow abound in European and Middle Eastern fiction, diaries, travel literature, erotica, ethnography, painting, photography, film, and digital media. Joseph Allen Boone explores these vast representations, linking European art to Middle Eastern sources largely unfamiliar to Western audiences and, in some cases, reproduced in this volume for the first time
eBook, English, 2014
Columbia University Press, New York, 2014
Criticism, interpretation, etc
1 online resource (537 pages) : color illustrations
9780231521826, 0231521820
978531102
Preface: re-orienting sexuality
Theory and history. Histories of cross-cultural encounter, Orientalism, and the politics of sexuality
Beautiful boys, sodomy, and hamams: a textual and visual history of tropes
Geographies of desire. Empire of "excesse", city of dreams: homoerotic imaginings in Istanbul and the Ottoman world
Epic ambitions and epicurean appetites: Egyptian stories I
Colonialism and its aftermaths, Gide to Chahine: Egyptian stories II
Modes and genres. Queer modernism and Middle Eastern poetic genres: appropriations, forgeries, and hoaxes
Looking backward: homoeroticism in miniaturist painting and Orientalist art
Looking again: twentieth- and twenty-first-century visual cultures
English