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| Funder | European Commission |
|---|---|
| Recipient Organization | The Hebrew University of Jerusalem |
| Country | Israel |
| Start Date | Oct 01, 2021 |
| End Date | Sep 30, 2026 |
| Duration | 1,825 days |
| Number of Grantees | 1 |
| Roles | Coordinator |
| Data Source | European Commission |
| Grant ID | 948051 |
VISIONIS sets out to write a cultural history of vision in Early Islam.
It aims to generate a paradigm shift in the understanding of visuality in the transitional period between Late Antiquity and Early Islam.
The project argues that the Quran is a key locus for our knowledge of the scope of visual strands in the epistemic space of Late Antiquity and the ways in which these visual strands were adapted and transformed by the emerging new religious community of Muslims.
It also assumes that Early Islamic exegetical, theological, legal, literary, and historiographic texts and Early Islamic artistic production attest to the heretofore unstudied adjustment, conceptualization, and calibration of the various Quranic visual elements in combination with local-temporal trends.
The project challenges the text-oriented research on the Quran that has prevented scholars from perceiving the works entanglement with the visual cultures of Late Antiquity.
It also aims to rectify the comparative research of Islamic artwork and Islamic legal statements that resulted in a lack of comprehensive research into the Quran and Early Islamic texts as sources for the inquiry of Islamic visual concepts and images.
VISIONIS will thus reverse the state of the art through two groundbreaking endeavours: 1) study of fundamental but neglected aspects of the Quran and Early Islamic writings, 2) development of a holistic perspective on the use and meaning of the visual, of practices of seeing, and concepts of the sense of sight in Early Islamic textual and material culture.
The project will thus dramatically improve our understanding of the cultural dynamics of Late Antiquity and Early Islam, will raise awareness of the specificities of Muslim discourses on seeing, enabling an assessment of their historical anchoring, and challenge prevailing misconceptions of Islamic visual cultures.
The Hebrew University of Jerusalem
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