The Wine of Babylon: Rethinking the Sacred in Late 17th-c. Damascus

Date
Mon April 10th 2023, 5:30 - 7:00pm
Event Sponsor
Abbasi Program In Islamic Studies
SGS Global Research Workshop series, as part of the SGS Global research Workshop
The Ho Center for Buddhist Studies
Department of Religious Studies
Department of Art and Art History
Department of East Asian Languages and Cultures
Center for Medieval and Early Modern Studies
Center for Spatial and Textual Analysis
Location
Zoom

 

The Wine of Babylon: Rethinking the Sacred in Late 17th-c. Damascus

Modern understanding of the ‘sacred’ and ‘sacred space’ has been profoundly influenced by the works of two eminent scholars: the German theologian Rudolf Otto (d. 1937), and the Romanian historian of religion Mircea Eliade (d. 1986). Both contributed significantly to establishing the irreconcilable polarities of the religious vs the secular, the sacred vs the profane, and to restricting human apprehension of the ‘sacred’ to the feeling that usually emerges in a ‘religious’ experience. This talk critically examines the assumptions underlying this modern understanding of the sacred with reference to the ideas and socio-spatial practices of the Damascene Sufi scholar, ʿAbd al-Ghanī al-Nābulusī (d. 1731). Al-Nābulusī, whose prolific life spanned 92 years and 300 works, led an unusual lifestyle that combined spirituality with leisure, material wealth with mystical poverty, innovative individuality with tradition. During a midlife crisis, he attempted to theorise his unique approach through a rethinking of the presence of numinosity in human life. Using landscape and architectural metaphors, he retrospectively structured his rich poetic output into a four-part anthology that captures the complexity of the human experience in a new way. His approach presents a fresh understanding of the anthropocentric essence of the sacred, highlighting, on the one hand, humanity’s spiritual, moral, and corporeal dimensions, and, on the other, human approaches to divinity through the multiplicity of worldly engagements. The talk pays special attention to the fourth part of his anthology, The Wine of Babylon, which is devoted to amatory poetry and recreational outings at the gardens of Damascus.

Samer Akkach: Fellow of the Australian Academy of Humanities (FAHA), Professor of Architectural History and Theory and Founding Director of the Centre for Asian and Middle Eastern Architecture (CAMEA) at the University of Adelaide, Australia. He is a leading researcher whose interdisciplinary scope spans several fields, including early modern Arab-Islamic intellectual and socio-urban histories and Islamic cosmology and mysticism. He is the recipient of several prestigious grants and awards for his teaching and research. He is the author of Cosmology and Architecture in Premodern Islam (SUNY 2005); Islam and the Enlightenment (Oneworld 2007); Letters of a Sufi Scholar (Brill 2010); Intimate Invocations (Brill 2012), Damascene Diaries: (Nissan 2015); Istanbul Observatory (ACRPS 2017); and the editor of ʿIlm: Science, Religion and Art in Islam (UAP 2019), and Naẓar: Vision, Belief, and Perception in Islamic Cultures (Brill 2022).

 

Global Approaches to Sacred Space is generously funded as part of the SGS Global Research Workshop series with further support from The Ho Center for Buddhist Studies, the Department of Religious Studies, the Department of Art and Art History, the Department of East Asian Languages and Cultures, the Center for Medieval and Early Modern Studies, the Center for Spatial and Textual Analysis, and the Sohaib and Sara Abbasi Program in Islamic Studies.