Tasting fire

affective turn in Qur’anic depictions of divine punishment

Authors

  • Kathryn Kueny Fordham University

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1558/bar.16118

Keywords:

Qur'an Taste , affect, body, senses

Abstract

Several Qur’anic passages suggest humans will experience God’s punishments through their sense of ‘taste.’ While the Qur’an conveys some of the ways that taste functions and relays knowledge in both earthly and paradisiacal realms, it is in the context of punishment that taste delivers the divine message more forcefully and directly than the other senses. The responses sparked by the horror of God’s pressing abhorrent flavors on one’s tongue, and down one’s throat, prompted the most strident disbeliever to cultivate a more righteous and receptive character, so that s/he may ‘taste mercy

Author Biography

  • Kathryn Kueny, Fordham University

    Kathryn Kueny is Professor of Theology at Fordham University, where she is Director
    of the Middle East Studies and Religious Studies programs. She received her MA and
    PhD from the University of Chicago, and is the author of two books, The Rhetoric of
    Sobriety: Wine in Early Islam, and Conceiving Identities: Maternity in Medieval Muslim
    Discourse and Practice, both published by SUNY Press.

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Published

2020-09-01

Issue

Section

Articles

How to Cite

Kueny, K. (2020). Tasting fire: affective turn in Qur’anic depictions of divine punishment. Body and Religion, 3(1), 5-26. https://doi.org/10.1558/bar.16118