Massad, Joseph A. Desiring Arabs. 448 p., 1 halftone. 6 x 9
2007
Cloth $35.00spec ISBN: 978-0-226-50958-7 (ISBN-10: 0-226-50958-3)
Spring 2007
Among the many shocking violations of the prisoners at Abu Ghraib,
the most notorious was sexual torture. Military personnel justified this
abhorrent technique as an effective tool for interrogating Arabs, who
are perceived as repressed and especially susceptible to sexual
coercion. These abuses laid bare a racist and sexually charged power
dynamic at the root of the U.S. conquest of Iraq—a dynamic that
reflected centuries of Western assumptions about Arab sexuality.
Desiring Arabs uncovers the roots of these attitudes and analyzes
the impact of Western ideas—both about sexuality and about Arabs—on Arab
intellectual production.
Sexual desire has long played a key role in Western judgments about the
value of Arab civilization. In the past, Westerners viewed the Arab
world as licentious, and Western intolerance of sex led them to brand
Arabs as decadent; but as Western society became more sexually open, the
supposedly prudish Arabs soon became viewed as backward. Rather than
focusing exclusively on how these views developed in the West, Joseph A.
Massad instead reveals the history of how Arabs represented their own
sexual desires. To this aim, he assembles a massive and diverse
compendium of Arabic writing from the nineteenth century to the present
in order to chart the changes in Arab sexual attitudes and their links
to Arab notions of cultural heritage and civilization. For instance, he
demonstrates how, in the 1980s, the rise of sexual identity politics and
human rights activism in the West came to define Arab nationalist, and
especially Islamist, responses to sexual desires and practices, and he
reveals the implications these reactions have had for contemporary
Arabs.
A work of impressive scope and erudition, Joseph A. Massad’s chronicle
of both the history and modern permutations of the debate over
representations of sexual desires and practices in the Arab world is a
crucial addition to our understanding of a frequently oversimplified and
vilified culture.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Acknowledgments
Introduction
1 Anxiety in Civilization
2 Remembrances of Desires Past
3 Re-Orienting Desire: The Gay International and the Arab World
4 Sin, Crimes, and Disease: Taxonomies of Desires Present
5 Deviant Fictions
6 The Truth of Fictional Desires
Conclusion
Works Cited Index
Subjects:
- GAY AND LESBIAN STUDIES
- GENDER AND SEXUALITY
- HISTORY: History of Ideas
- HISTORY: Middle Eastern History
- LITERATURE AND LITERARY CRITICISM: Asian Languages
- MIDDLE EASTERN STUDIES
- RELIGION: Islam
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