According to Muhammad, ‘God is beautiful and He loves beauty.’ Yet, Islam is rarely associated with beauty, and today, a politicized Islam dominates many perceptions. This work tells a forgotten story of beauty in Islam through the writings of celebrated but little-studied Sufi scholar and saint Rūzbihān Baqlī (1128–1209). Rūzbihān argued that the pursuit of beauty in the world and in oneself was the goal of Muslim life. One should become beautiful in imitation of God and reclaim the innate human nature created in God’s beautiful image. Rūzbihān’s theory of beauty is little known, largely because of his convoluted style and eccentric terminology in both Persian and Arabic. In this book, Kazuyo Murata revives Rūzbihān’s ideas for modern readers. She provides an overview of Muslim discourse on beauty before Rūzbihān’s time; an analysis of key terms related to beauty in the Qur’ān, Ḥadīth, and in Rūzbihān’s writings; a reconstruction of Rūzbihān’s understanding of divine, cosmic, and human beauty; and a discussion of what he regards as the pinnacle of beauty in creation, the prophets, especially Adam, Abraham, Joseph, Moses, and Muhammad.
Содержание
Illustrations
Acknowledgments
Note on Transliteration
Introduction
1. Discourse on Beauty
2. The Language of Beauty
3. The Theology of Beauty
4. The Anthropology and Cosmology of Beauty
5. The Prophetology of Beauty
Notes
Selected Bibliography
General Index
Index of Qurʾānic Verses
Index of Ḥadīths and Sayings
Об авторе
Kazuyo Murata is Lecturer in Islamic Studies at King’s College London and coeditor (with Mohammed Rustom and Atif Khalil) of
In Search of the Lost Heart: Explorations in Islamic Thought by William C. Chittick, also published by SUNY Press.