The transcendent value of disgust: 缅北强奸鈥檚 Jeannie Miller offers a new perspective on an Arabic scholar
Jeannie Miller is making a big impact with a new perspective on some very old prose.
Miller, an assistant professor in the department of near & Middle Eastern civilizations, is working on a manuscript examining The Book of Animals by al-Jahiz, a ninth-century Arabic writer and polymath. Al-Jahiz saw himself as a theologian and natural scientist, but is often miscast because of the risqu茅 nature of some of his prose.
鈥淗e sometimes gets placed as an entertaining literary figure, as opposed to a religious thinker, which I think is wrong,鈥 says Miller, whose forthcoming book is entitled Performative Inquiry: How Rhetoric Produced an Abbasid Natural Science.
鈥淭hese things were not necessarily opposed in the ninth century. By classifying al-Jahiz that way, one misrepresents the history of Islam by removing his entertaining work from that history.鈥
The Book of Animals was written 鈥渋n service to God,鈥 says Miller, and partly in response to Aristotle鈥檚 biology books. In it, al-Jahiz exhibits an 鈥渆xciting and very inclusive鈥 approach to humanity. Using pigeons as an analogy, for example, he observes that there seem to be many natural forms of sexuality, including homosexuality in males and females, as well as varying preferences regarding domination.
鈥淢uch of the Book of Animals is dedicated to arguing against people who thought that exceptional people and animals were monstrous or scary. Like most intellectuals of his time, he was an elitist and did not treat everyone equally 鈥 but he did treat all kinds of people as natural results of God鈥檚 creation,鈥 says Miller, a former Fulbright scholar who joined the 缅北强奸 faculty in 2013 after doing her undergraduate degree at Harvard University and her doctorate at New York University.
鈥淚鈥檝e always been interested in works that blend literature and science. For this project, I wanted to set aside modern divisions between science and literature, and between entertainment and religion, and just ask what al-Jahiz was trying to accomplish, and why he felt it had to be done this way,鈥 Miller says. 鈥淗e says his goal is to show how wondrous divine creation is, but was it really necessary to spend half a volume citing poetry about excrement and the perversions of the dung beetle?鈥
Miller鈥檚 book will make the case that in fact al-Jahiz did think it was necessary to examine feelings of repulsion and attraction, through poetry and rational argument, in order to fully understand the place of humans in God鈥檚 creation. 鈥淗e wanted to bring together every way of knowing and understanding the world God created, including our innate reactions of disgust or pleasure.鈥
This was very likely a product of his exposure to the rhetorical debates practised by his theology teachers, adds Miller. 鈥淭hey weren鈥檛 just engaging in dialectic 鈥 they were also citing poetry, and recounting anecdotes to make points about the natural world.鈥
Paper had been introduced to the Muslim world around 800 AD and al-Jahiz responded to this new technological opportunity by writing large compilations as a way to preserve, defend, and theorise some of those rhetorical debate practices.
Miller notes al-Jahiz was a foundational writer in the 鈥渁dab鈥 genre, and that even though this type of writing was often full of 鈥渙bscene stories and dirty jokes,鈥 it was also often religious in nature. In fact, many adab writers were religious scholars.
鈥淎dab texts are obscene and they are religious, and I don鈥檛 think people felt a lot of problems with that at the time,鈥 says Miller, who studied Arabic in Ethiopia and in Syria just before the war.
Modern editions of those texts, published both by European and Arab presses, have at certain times removed passages deemed too sexual or homoerotic, but this didn鈥檛 happen to al-Jahiz, she says.
Arabic texts are worthy of being studied with the care, attention and creativity afforded English literary heritage, adds Miller, who also speaks some French, Italian, German and Hebrew.
鈥淛ust allowing English speakers access to the richness, complexity and diversity of the Arabic heritage is a small contribution to combatting Islamophobia.鈥