Jananne Al-Ani
"Scenes and Types"
Bio
Jananne Al-Ani was born in Iraq in 1966. She lives and works in London. Al-Ani
studied Fine Art at the Byam Shaw School of Art and graduated with an MA in
Photography from the Royal College of Art in 1997. Al-Ani has exhibited widely
in Britain and abroad and has had solo shows at Dryphoto Art Contemporanea,
Prato (2002) and the Rencontres Internationales de la Photographie, Arles (2002).
Recent group exhibitions include Beyond East and West: Seven Transnational Artists
at the Krannert Art Museum, Champaign (2004); Love Affairs at IFA-Galerie, Stuttgart,
touring to Bonn and Berlin; Alethia: the Real of Concealment at Göteborgs Konstmuseum;
And the One doesn't stir without the Other, Ormeau Baths Gallery, Belfast; Disorientation
curated by Jack Persekian for the Haus Der Kulturen Der Welt, Berlin and The
New Schehrazades curated by Rose Issa at the Centre de Cultura Contemporānia
de Barcelona (all 2003). Al-Ani has co-curated a number of exhibitions including
Veil at The New Art Gallery Walsall touring to Bluecoat Gallery & Open Eye Gallery,
Liverpool; Modern Art Oxford and Kulturhuset Stockholm (2003/4) and Fair Play
at Danielle Arnaud Contemporary Art, London touring to Angel Row Gallery, Nottingham
(2001/2). Recent commissions include Identinet, Film and Video Umbrellašs web
based project at www.identinet.net (2002). Al-Ani was the recipient of the East
International Award (2000) and her works can be found in public collections
including the Arts Council of England and the Imperial War Museum, London; the
Pompidou Centre, Paris and the Smithsonian Institution, Washington DC. Al-Ani
is currently working, in collaboration with Film and Video Umbrella and the
Norwich Art Gallery, towards a touring solo exhibition in 2004/5
Randi Deguilhem
Education in the Harem: A Means of Individuation
of the Person?
Abstract
For several years, I have been working on various means of individuation of
the person with several of my case studies coming from the different educational
environments in 19th century Syria. The present paper would focus on education
in the harem which would lead to a form of individuation in the sense of artistic
self-expression.
A number of publications exist on this subject such as: The Imperial Harem of
the Sultans. Daily Life at the Ciragan Palace during the 19th Century. Memoirs
of Leyla (Saz) Hanimefendi, Istanbul, 1995. I would use memoirs such as these
as first-hand source material and, if time permits, look at some newspaper material
from the end of the 19th century which comments upon education in the harem.
Publications have appeared on this question such as those by Fatima Mernissi,
Marilyn Booth and Mary-Ann Fay.
Bio
Randi Deguilhem is a Permanent Senior Researcher (CR1 habilitée) with
the CNRS (National Center for Scientific Research) at IREMAM (Institute for
Research and Study on the Arab and Muslim World), Aix-en-Provence. She holds
a PhD from NYU and a habilitation from the U. of Aix-Marseille. She has lived
for a number of years in Damascus both in the 1980s (Fulbright-Hays recipient)
and in the 1990s (researcher at IFEAD) and returns every year for her research.
For the past five years, she has been directing a doctoral seminar in Middle
East history at the MMSH in Aix-en-Pce. She is past president (2001-2003) of
the Syrian Studies Association, former scientific coordinator (1997-2001) of
the Individual and Society in the Mediterranean Muslim World ESF research program
and Editor-in-Chief of The Islamic Mediterranean series, London, IB Tauris.
She has published on a variety of topics, with a particular interest on the
pious foundations in modern and contemporary Syria, the intellectual life and
educational systems in late Ottoman Damascus and on the French Secular Mission
in Mandate Syria. Among her most notable publications: Le waqf dans lespace
islamique. Outil de pouvoir socio-politique, ed. Randi Deguilhem, IFEAD, Damascus,
1995 in which she has written 2 chapters; The wakf in the Ottoman Empire
until 1914, Encyclopaedia of Islam, 2000, pp. 87-92; Reflections
on the Secularisation of Education in the 19th Century Ottoman Empire: The Syrian
Provinces, The Great Ottoman-Turkish Civilisation, Ankara, Yeni Turkiye,
2000, pp. 662-668; Turning Syrians into Frenchmen: the cultural politics
of a French non-governmental organization in French Mandate Syria (1920-67)
the French Secular Mission Schools, Islam and Christian-Muslim
Relations, vol. 13, n° 4, 2002, pp. 449-460.
Joan DelPlato
Discussant
Bio
Joan DelPlato is Professor of Art History at Simon's Rock College of Bard in
Great Barrington, Massachusetts. Her book on representations of the harem in
19th-century French and British art and culture is titled MULTIPLE WIVES, MULTIPLE
PLEASURES: REPRESENTING THE HAREM 1800-1875 (Fairleigh Dickinson Univesrity
Press, 2002). The book won a Millard Meiss publication award from the College
Art Association. Her other writing on the harem representation can be found
in Amy Tucker's VISUAL LITERACY (McGraw-Hill, 2001) and in GENDERED LANDSCAPES,
ed. Bonj Szczygiel, et al. (Penn State, 2000). She was chair and speaker at
the panel, "Oriental Erotics," College Art Association annual meeting (2002)
and moderator for the panel on 19th-Century French Orientalist Art, at the conference
ORIENTALISM: AN INTERNATIONAL AFFAIR, held at The Sterling and Francine Clark
Art Institute, Williamstown, MA (2000).
Reina Lewis
"The Pull of the Harem: The Socializing Effects of Segregated
Spatiality"
Bio
Reina Lewis is Senior Lecturer in Cultural Studies at the University of East
London. She is author of Gendering Orientalism: Race, Femininity and Representation
(Routledge, 1996) and Rethinking Orientalism: Women, Travel and the Ottoman
Harem (IB Tauris, 2004). She is also co-editor, with Sara Mills, of Feminist
Postcolonial Theory: A Reader (Edinburgh University Press, 2003), and series
editor, with Teresa Heffernan, of Cultures in Dialogue, a multi-volume project
republishing Eastern and Western womenšs writing from the eighteenth to twentieth
centuries (Gorgias Press).
Shaun E. Marmon
Sons and Mothers: Lienage; Polemic and Filial Bonds
among Fifteenth Century Ulama
Abstract
The bitter enmity between the two prominent fifteenth century Egyptian a¯lims,
Jala¯l al-Di¯n Abd al-Rahma¯n ibn Abi¯ Bakr al-Suyu¯ti¯
and Shams al-Di¯n Abd al- Rahma¯n ibn Muhammad al-Sakha¯wi¯,
was part of a larger, multi-generational and multi-factional dispute among the
ulama¯ of Mamluk Cairo. This dispute, like others, involved
teachers, students, household members, lay followers and supporters
from the military class. But what is often neglected in modern discussions of
the vitriolic exchanges between al-Suyu¯ti¯ and al-Sakha¯wi¯
is the gendered element of the controversy. One of the arenas of debate was
the status of women in Paradise. Would women or would they not be allowed to
see the face of God? Al-Suyu¯ti¯ argued that they would not. Al-Sakha¯wi¯
argued that they would.
This long standing theological controversy quickly took on ad hominem or, one
might say, ad maternam tone. The scholastic dispute over women, as an abstract
category, and the Deity turned into a very personal dispute about real mothers
and lineage. On the one hand, al-Sakha¯wi¯ denounced al-Suyu¯ti¯
for supposedly neglecting his own mother, a Turkish concubine. On the other
hand, he drew on a very old, but clearly still powerful model of nasab, and
criticized al-Suyu¯ti¯s lineage as being non-existent on the
maternal side. Al-Suyu¯ti¯, al-Sakha¯wi¯ pointed out, was,
after all, the child of a concubine and thus had no maternal nasab. Al-Suyu¯ti¯
responded with the treatise, al-Dara¯ri¯ f i¯ awla¯d al-sara¯ri¯,
an enumeration of the famous and worthy personages of the past who had been
children of concubines.
A third figure, Nu¯r al-Di¯n Ali¯ ibn Abd Allah al-Hasani¯
al-Samhu¯di¯, one of the most brilliant scholars of the fifteenth
century, proudly claimed sayyid descent from both his father and mother. A student
of one of al-Suyu¯ti¯s most implacable enemies and a close friend
of al-Sakha¯wi¯, al-Samhu¯di¯ wrote a two volume treatise
entitled, Jawa¯hir al-iqdayn fi¯ fadl al-sharifayn, the sharifayn
being al-ilm, knowledge, and al-nasab al-nabawi¯, descent from the
prophet. For al-Samhu¯di¯, who had a particularly intense and affectionate
adult relationship with his own mother, there was no doubt that his sacred lineage
was secured by his mothers status as well as his fathers.
Women, especially mothers, were clearly what one might call multi-valent signifiers
in the rhetoric of these fifteenth century scholars. But these women were also
real people, participants as older women in mother/son relationships that were
clearly important, for a range of reasons, in the lives of their adult sons.
From what al-Suyu¯ti¯, al-Sakha¯wi¯ and al-Samhu¯di¯
wrote about their own and one anothers mothers, as well as from the writings
of their students and other contemporaries, we can put together a complex portrait
of what one might call filial friendships. Contrary to the oft-repeated trope
that patrilineality and the prevalence of concubinage made Mamluk society a
motherless society, we see that mothers, whether they were slave
or free, were very present indeed, both in the lives of their grown sons and
in various areas of public discourse.
Nancy Mickelwright
Whose Harem? Harem Photographs from the Late Ottoman
World
Abstract
This paper examines a series of photographs of the harem, taken by photographers
whose relationship to their subject matter varied dramatically, and whose purposes
in producing images of the harem were equally diverse. While some of these photographs
will be well-known to the audience, most are unpublished and offer a new means
of understanding how some Ottomans themselves responded to the widely reproduced
tourist views of the harem in their own photographic constructions. The evidentiary
value of the images, their interpretative significance and their role as consumer
goods are problematized.
Bio
Nancy Micklewright joined the Getty Grant Program in 2001, after teaching the
history of Islamic art and architecture, and the history of photography at the
University of Victoria in British Columbia, Canada, for 12 years. She was one
of the first scholars of Islamic art to incorporate gender as a category of
analysis in her research, publishing on aspects of late Ottoman art (painting,
dress and photography). Her book, A Victorian Traveler in the Middle East, The
photography and travel writing of Annie Lady Brassey, came out in late 2003.
The history of photography in the late Ottoman world is a continuing research
interest. Her responsibilities at the Grant Program include individual research
grants, museum conservation grants and the graduate internship program at the
Getty Center.
Kishwar Rizvi
Capture and Catharsis: Womens Spaces in Contemporary
Pakistan
Abstract
The rituals of inhabitation in contemporary Pakistan are layered and multifaceted.
In a society defined by Islamic political and religious values, women as well
as men, are required to abide by certain social preconditions imposed
and imagined. This paper locates the discussion of womens spatial experiences
in the context of two architectural types, the harem and the Sufi shrine. In
Pakistan, these spaces represent two examples of the types of physical autonomy
allowed women and also the negotiations embedded in the enactment of that autonomy.
In contrast to the harem which is ultimately connected to the patriarch who
owns it, the shrine is an institution in which womens participation is
allowed, indeed expected. This paper explores the multiple ways in which female
authority is manifested here: as an invisible presence (woman as patron; as
proxy for the expression of mens devotion) and as a visible performer
(woman as keeper of the shrine and its legend; as the female voice appropriated
by both men and women participants in Sufirituals).
Bio
Kishwar Rizvi teaches the history of Islamic architecture at Barnard College,
Columbia University. She has written on issues of gender, nationalism and religious
identity in the contemporary art and architecture of Iran and Pakistan. Her
primary research is on representations of religious and imperial authority in
sixteenth-century architecture in Safavid Iran.
Rose Issa at the Centre de Cultura Contemporània de Barcelona (all 2003)
Irvin Cemil Schick
Harem as Gendered Space and the Spatial Reproduction
of Gender
Abstract
The word harem denotes both the womenfolk of a household and the dedicated spatial
enclosure in which they live. This paper approaches the latter meaning of the
word in the context of recent theoretical work on the social construction of
space and its relation to gender. Like any social institution, the harem is
in essence a representation; and like the history of any social institution,
its history is largely that of its representation. But representations of the
harem have been multiple and often contradictory, its portrayal ranging from
a microcosm of oriental despotism and the locus of phallocratic oppression on
the one hand, to a space of female autonomy in which Muslim women are able to
engage in social, economic, and even political activities unhindered by male
domination on the other. Rather than searching for the true essence of the harem
in religious texts or historical practices, it may be more fruitful to conceptualize
it primarily as a socially constructed space, often more imagined than physical,
and to focus on how it has functioned to produce and reproduce gender. Feminist
geographers have long stressed the mutually constitutive nature of space and
gender, arguing that the differences in the ways men and women experience geography
are not only a consequence of gender differences, but are also productive of
them. Here, geography must be understood in the broadest sense, as encompassing
spatial structures not only natural but also artificial, not only physical but
also imagined.
The harem system has provided a spatial basis for gender difference in many
Muslim societies. And since spatial differentiation often co-exists with power
differentiation, it has been implicated in the production and perpetuation of
power assymetries along gender lines. Segregation reproduces itself, as spaces
of otherness become not only repositories of others, but producers of alterity
as well. At the same time, this necessarily means that the harem is also a site
of resistance; indeed, the ongoing political struggle over veiling and seclusion
can be viewed as an aspect of spatial politics, a contest over the restructuring
of space.
Bio
Irvin C. Schick has taught at Harvard University and MIT, where he is currently
a researcher. He is the author of The Erotic Margin: Sexuality and Spatiality
in Alteritist Discourse (1999) and The Fair Circassian: Adventures of an Orientalist
Motif (2004, in Turkish). He has edited or co-edited several books of which
the most recent, an annotated anthology of European womens narratives
of Turkish captivity, will be published in the coming year. In addition to women
in Islam and the representation of Muslim women, his research interests include
questions of identity and modernity in Turkey, as well as the Islamic arts of
the book, especially calligraphy.
Heghnar Watenpaugh
The Harem as Biography: Domestic Architecture, Gender
and Nostalgia in Modern Syria
Abstract
In recent years, Syrian popular culture has witnessed a renewed interest in
the visible past, and the commercialization and commodification of historic
architecture in a variety of cultural productions. Under the rubric of what
is being called "Al-'Awda ila al-Tarikh", ("The Return to History,"),
immensely popular cultural forms such as television serials focusing on the
recent past, filmed in historic settings, are eagerly consumed (S. Kawakibi,
R. Blecher). Anthropologists and historians of contemporary Syria have noted
the peculiar trajectories of certain visions of the past, such as "the
old Damascene house," a typology of urban domestic architecture, from museum
displays to reproduction and recontextualization as settings for restaurants,
festivals, or nightclubs (C. Salamandra). In addition, there is a surge in novels
set in historic periods and memoirs, widely read and commented upon. Prominently,
these constructions depict traditional gender roles in the setting of the Old
Courtyard House, in ways imbued with nostalgia. This paper initiates a critique
of literary constructions of the "Old Courtyard House" and of its
physical preservation through the prism of gender, by focusing on biographies
and autobiographies of prominent women, and the spatial hierarchies that they
stage. In particular, this paper uses 19th and 20th century biographies of Aleppo's
first modern poetess, Marianna Marrash. Marrash was one of the first female
figures to have a public persona in this city. Yet her biographies spatialize
her less as a published poet in the public sphere and more as a hostess presiding
over gatherings in the old courtyard house. Thus the description of the architecture
of the home is made to stand in for her biography.
Bio
Heghnar Watenpaugh is an Assistant Professor of the History of Architecture
and the Aga Khan Career Development Professor in the History, Theory and Criticism
section of the Department of Architecture at the Massachusetts Institute of
Technology. She is the author of The Image of an Ottoman City: Imperial Architecture
and Urban Experience in Aleppo in the Sixteenth and Seventeenth Centuries (Leiden:
Brill, forthcoming 2004). In addition to early modern Islamic architectural
history, her research addresses the preservation and commodification of architecture,
and their relationship to modernity, colonialism, and nationalism in the modern
Islamic world.