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Eunuchs and Sacred Boundaries in Islamic Society

Part of the Studies in Middle Eastern History series
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In this thought-provoking interdisciplinary work, Shaun Marmon describes how eunuchs, as a category of people who embodied ambiguity, both defined and mediated critical thresholds of moral and physical space in the household, in the palace and in the tomb of pre-modern Islamic society.

The author's central focus is on the sacred society of eunuchs who guarded the tomb of the Prophet Muhammad in Medina for over six centuries and whose last representatives still perform many of their time honored rituals to this day.

Through Marmon's account, the "sacred" eunuchs of Medina become historical guides into uncharted dimensions of Islamic ritual, political symbolism, social order, gender and time.

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RRP £147.50
Product Details
Oxford University Press Inc
0195071018 / 9780195071016
Hardback
297
18/01/1996
United States
176 pages
147 x 217 mm, 356 grams