A collection of essays examining the role and power of images from a wide variety of media in today's Middle Eastern societies.
This timely book examines the power and role of the image in modern Middle Eastern societies. The essays explore the role and function of image making to highlight the ways in which the images "speak" and what visual languages mean for the construction of Islamic subjectivities, the distribution of power, and the formation of identity and belonging.
Visual Culture in the Modern Middle East addresses aspects of the visual in the Islamic world, including the presentation of Islam on television; on the internet and other digital media; in banners, posters, murals, and graffiti; and in the satirical press, cartoons, and children's books.
"This volume takes a new approach to the subject . . . and will be an important contribution to our knowledge in this area. . . . It is comprehensive and well-structured with fascinating material and analysis." âPeter Chelkowski, New York University
"An innovative volume analyzing and instantiating the visual culture of a variety of Muslim societies [which] constitutes a substantially new object of study in the regional literature and one that creates productive links with history, anthropology, political science, art history, media studies, and urban studies, as well as area studies and Islamic studies." âWalter Armbrust, University of Oxford

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Visual Culture in the Modern Middle East
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eBook - ePub
Visual Culture in the Modern Middle East
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Print ISBN
9780253008886
Subtopic
Cultural & Social AnthropologyPART 1
âMovingâ Images

FIGURE 1.1. Mural of Muhammadâs ascension, located at the intersection of Modarres and Motahhari Avenues, Tehran, Iran, 2008. Authorâs photograph, 2010.
CHAPTER 1
Images of the Prophet Muhammad In and Out of Modernity: The Curious Case of a 2008 Mural in Tehran
A colorful mural appeared at the busy junction between Modarres Highway and Motahhari Street in central Tehran in 2008, gracing the wall of an otherwise unremarkable five-story cement building (fig. 1.1 and plate 1). This mural does not depict what one would expect to see in Iranâs post-revolutionary mural arts program: Ayatollahs Khomeini and Khamenei or the portrait of a martyr who died in the IranâIraq War (1980â88). These other mural subjects, which have graced and given meaning to the capital cityâs urban landscape over the past thirty years, represent a genre of public portraiture that stresses both the Islamic Republicâs Shiâi-Persian identity and governance and the duty of all Muslims, both at home and abroad, to sacrifice themselves to a greater cause by fighting and dying in war.1
Casting aside such overt iconographies and messages, as is the case with many other large-scale paintings currently appearing on cement walls throughout Iran,2 this mural instead depicts the Prophet Muhammad on the night of his heavenly ascension (miâraj).3 Depicted in an Islamic painterly style, Muhammad is shown wearing a green cloak with his arms folded at the waist, as he sits on his human-headed flying steed named Buraq. While Buraq bears delicate facial features, Muhammadâs visage has been left blank but is nevertheless framed by his other prophetic attributes: his black tresses, white turban, and flaming gold nimbus. He ascends the skies, leaping through tiled archways that are decorated with epigraphic bands and guarded by disembodied angels who hover in midair.
The scene does not halt here. In the muralâs lower right corner, a young and beautiful inhabitant of paradise, most likely a âbright-eyedâ huri, climbs a tree that grows in a fertile valley of grass. From that tree, the huri picks a cluster of flower blossoms and hands it to a man who stretches his arms out to receive the offering. This man is perhaps a deceased soul being welcomed into the Garden of Eden, which Muhammad witnessed and visited on the night of his ascension. The young man wears modern and rather hip clothing; in fact, he could be any Iranian youth strolling through Tehranâs streets and parks. Painted in repoussĂ© with his back to the viewer and depicted in a photorealistic style, the figure has indiscernible facial features, suggesting that he represents a type rather than an identifiable individual. Judging from the traditional emphasis afforded to martyrs within Tehranâs mural arts program since 1979, this type is most likely the martyr (or the martyr in potentia), that is, the corporate stand-in for individuals willing to perish for state-and-religion or in the âway of Godâ (fi sabil Allah), whose final reward is none other than paradise.
So what is one to make of this contemporary mural, its double miâraj-martyrdom thematic, and its blending of old and new pictorial styles? What is its larger significance for understanding the diverse roles images play in the artistic traditions and visual culture of Iran today? And what does this mural tell us about figural representation and, more specifically, how a powerful icon such as the Prophet Muhammad can become a point of cultural contention or a symbolic pivot for the politics of identity on a global scale after the Danish cartoon controversy of 2005â2006?
This study aims to offer preliminary answers to these questions by focusing on this recent ascension mural in Iran, as well as on images of the Prophet in both Islamic spheres and European contexts. In particular, my aim is to determine how this particular mural engages with Iranian discourses that touch upon issues of tradition, identity, and belonging, while also advancing such claims within the complex cultural circuits and volatile religious entanglements of the postâ9/11 world. In exploring the many issues raised by this one muralâthe only of its kind to represent the Prophet Muhammad, openly and proudly, in a physical space in a Muslim-majority countryâit is clear that contemporary images navigate the past and present tenses, local and global spheres, and real and virtual space. Much like sharp rhetoric, moreover, images like the ascension mural can act as powerful purveyors of ideologies and ontologies, because they likewise make arguments about knowledge and stake positions concerning truth and reality.
Indeed, besides manifestly discarding clichĂ©d statements that Islam putatively prohibits figural imagery, especially representations of the Prophet Muhammad,4 this ascension mural advances specific arguments while also staking several positions. Its arguments include promoting, first, the utmost rank and legitimacy of the Prophet Muhammad, who was invested by God with prophecy and knowledge of the otherworld on the night of his miâraj; second, the transcendental beauty of Muhammad in the aftermath of the desecration of his image in the dozen satirical cartoons published in the Danish newspaper Jyllands-Posten in 2005; and third, the supreme value of fighting, and possibly dying, for a cause that is couched as being âin the way of God.â In brief, the mural seeks to reclaim the Prophet Muhammad and his blessed beauty for the Islamic community by mounting a visual counterattack.
This âstriking backâ is ipso facto the muralâs position, which is one that carefully harnesses an Islamic artistic past, editing its main features and rearticulating them to promote Iranâs religio-national messages in todayâs global world. While navigating both the past and present, Islamic and non-Islamic discourses, this mural essentially stakes a Shiâi-Persian stance of opposition and resistance, thereby offering an imaged repartee to what the Iranian regime perceives as demeaning hegemonic discourses on Muhammad and the Islamic faith in various media outlets, especially those stemming from the Euro-American, Christian âWest.â
In other words, this mural helps carve out a number of salient paths of critical inquiry in order to better understand visual culture as it takes shape within a specific modern Muslim context that willfully seeks to intersect with the politics of identity on a global scale. It also serves as a heuristic device for tracking public discourses on self and other, while at the same time functioning as a barometer for religio-cultural contestations within image-making traditions (and industries) in Iran and beyond. Perhaps more germane for the broader field of visual culture, moreover, this mural functions as a symbol that partakes in the deep semantic codes of a culture, thereby generating new discursive fields of meaning configured not through verbalized but rather visualized signs. As W. J. T. Mitchell would note, this mural indeed demands âequal rights with language,â5 thereby inviting us to engage in interpretative acts of the visual via its various signifying systems and expressive cultures.
Tangled Skeins
The muralâs artist, a female M.F.A student at Tehran University named Faezeh Rahmati, won the competition launched by Tehranâs municipality (shahrdari) in 2008. The municipalityâs program on murals, fitted within its Bureau of Beautification (sazman-i zibasazi), selected her composition to adorn the blank side of the building, centrally located at the intersection of Modarres and Motahhari Avenues.6 Before 2008, this building boasted a highly visible, large-scale banner of the Palestinian suicide bomber Rim Salah al-Riyashi (d. 2003), itself a duplication of a photograph taken immediately prior to her death. In the banner, this female martyr is shown holding her son and a rifle, exclaiming that she loves martyrdom more than motherhood.7 For reasons that are unclearâto beautify the city? to remove an overtly martyrial message?âthis worn-out banner was pulled down to make way for the ascension mural.
Once denuded of the banner, the buildingâs empty wall was adorned with the more muted miâraj scene, which the artist Rahmati entitled A Bouquet of Flowers from the Ascent (Dast-i Gul az âUruj).8 Thus, a contemporary black-and-white photograph of a female martyr ceded way to a vibrantly colored illustration of Muhammadâs ascension, executed in a âclassicalâ Islamic book arts style.
The muralâs âclassicalâ iconographic sources are easily identifiable. The artist admits that she drew upon and selected a series of scenes belonging to the famous Timurid illustrated manuscript of the Miârajnama, or Book of Muhammadâs Ascension, that was produced in the city of Herat around 1436 ce (figs. 1.2â1.4). Boasting more than fifty paintings of Muhammadâs ascension through the heavens, his encounter with prophets and God, and his visits to heaven and hell, this manuscript, held in the BibliothĂšque nationale de France in Paris, is without a doubt a rare and stunning masterpiece of Islamic art. As such, it is frequently included in surveys of Islamic painting. Additionally, it also has been the subject of two studies, a handbook of illustrations prepared by Marie-Rose SĂ©guy (in French, 1972; reissued in English, 1977) and a monographic study by the present author (2008).9 SĂ©guyâs handbook was translated into Persian and published in 2006 under the title âBook of Ascension: The Miraculous Journey of His Majesty the Prophetâ (Miârajnama: Safar-i Muâjiza-i Asa-yi Payghambar). This Persian edition has since been displayed in the vitrines of academic bookstores lining Engelab Avenue, whence it served to inspire a number of publications, conferences, and art projects by scholars, students, and artists at Tehran University. Thus, Rahmatiâs mural is based on an Islamic fifteenth-century illustrated manuscript of Muhammadâs ascension, made available via a handbook of its illustrations as published in a widely popular 2006 Persian edition.
This rather uncomplicated artistic and scholarly stemma notwithstanding, a few âtechnicalâ issues make this Book of Ascension manuscript more difficult to untangle. The manuscriptâs provenance, language, script, and pictorial language are, like the proverbial Gordion knot, almost intractably problematic, especially considering its reception and adaptation within a contemporary Iranian public mi...
Table of contents
- Cover
- Half title
- Title
- Copyright
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction
- Part 1. âMovingâ Images
- Part 2. Islamist Iconographies
- Part 3. Satirical Contestations
- Part 4. Authenticity and Reality in Trans-National Broadcasting
- Bibliography
- Contributors
- Index
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Yes, you can access Visual Culture in the Modern Middle East by Christiane Gruber, Sune Haugbolle, Christiane Gruber,Sune Haugbolle in PDF and/or ePUB format. We have over 1.5 million books available in our catalogue for you to explore.