As I prepared to teach my class ‘Science and Islam’ last spring, I noticed something peculiar about the book I was about to assign to my students. It wasn’t the text – a wonderful translation of a medieval Arabic encyclopaedia – but the cover. Its illustration showed scholars in turbans and medieval Middle Eastern dress, examining the starry sky through telescopes. The miniature purported to be from the premodern Middle East, but something was off.
Besides the colours being a bit too vivid, and the brushstrokes a little too clean, what perturbed me were the telescopes. The telescope was known in the Middle East after Galileo developed it in the 17th century, but almost no illustrations or miniatures ever depicted such an object. When I tracked down the full image, two more figures emerged: one also looking through a telescope, while the other jotted down notes while his hand spun a globe – another instrument that was rarely drawn. The starkest contradiction, however, was the quill in the fourth figure’s hand. Middle Eastern scholars had always used reed pens to write. By now there was no denying it: the cover illustration was a modern-day forgery, masquerading as a medieval illustration.
The whole essay is worth reading as it gives an interesting and somewhat chilling insight into efforts being made to mould perceptions of Islam and its relevance to the modern world.
It also highlights a Western tendency to prefer easy historical fictions to more problematic and incomplete realities, Hollywood being an obvious example.
8 comments:
I recall that soon after Ghana ( formerly the Gold Coast) became independent, they had new school textbooks showing Africans teaching Europeans shorthand and other things. I believe that Harold MacMillan's publishing company did very well out of school text books for Africa.
" The wind of change""blew plenty of cash in their direction!
But I liked Fort Apache and the idea that John Payne brought peace and prosperity to the locals.
Ouch, these errors are a pain, it is of course John Wayne as in Wayne Rooney.
Edward - interesting, I didn't know that. I might even buy a textbook like that as a talking point if I ever came across one. eBay perhaps.
Demetrius - did we ever take such films seriously though? As history I mean.
As for Islam and its alleged scientific legacy all I can say is....." what have you done for me lately" lately being the last 700 years, give or take a century.
Thud - I agree but maybe the time will come when people answer that with forged historical references.
They are all left handed
Sinister.
Doonhamer.
Doonhamer - well spotted. Could almost be an Islamic joke but probably not.
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