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Palgrave Macmillan

Emotion in Christian and Islamic Contemplative Texts, 1100–1250

Cry of the Turtledove

  • Book
  • © 2021

Overview

  • Compares English and Arabic contemplative texts
  • Contributes to furthering an interfaith dialogue between medieval Islam and Christianity
  • Engages with history of emotions criticism and theory

Part of the book series: The New Middle Ages (TNMA)

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Table of contents (8 chapters)

  1. Introduction

  2. Paradigms of Love

  3. Embodied Affect

  4. Affective Semiotics

  5. Conclusions

Keywords

About this book

This book offers a comparative study of emotion in Arabic Islamic and English Christian contemplative texts, c. 1110-1250, contributing to the emerging interest in ‘globalization’ in medieval studies. A.S.Lazikani  argues for the necessity of placing medieval English devotional texts in a  more global context and seeks to modify influential narratives on the ‘history of emotions’ to enable this more wide-ranging critical outlook. Across eight chapters, the book examines the dialogic encounters generated by comparative readings of Muhyddin Ibn ‘Arabi (1165-1240), ‘Umar Ibn al-Fārid (1181-1235), Abu al-Hasan al-Shushtarī (d. 1269), Ancrene Wisse (c. 1225), and the Wooing Group (c. 1225). Investigating the two-fold ‘paradigms of love’ in the figure of Jesus and in the image of the heart, the (dis)embodied language of affect, and the affective semiotics of absence and secrecy, Lazikani demonstrates an interconnection between thereligious traditions of early Christianity and Islam.


Authors and Affiliations

  • University of Oxford, Oxford, UK

    A. S. Lazikani

About the author

A.S. Lazikani is Lecturer at the University of Oxford, UK. She specializes in devotional writing of the eleventh to thirteenth centuries, working especially in the history of emotions. Her publications include, among many articles, the book Cultivating the Heart: Feeling and Emotion in Twelfth- and Thirteenth-Century Religious Texts (2015).

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