Dante, Moses and the Book of Islam. Visualizing the Qur'an from Byzantium to Filippino Lippi's AdorationReading, Translating and Printing the Muslim Holy Text from the Middle Ages to Modern Times

A book salon presenting Professor Roberta Morosini's new book.

Dante, Moses and the Book of Islam. Visualizing the Qur

Monday, April 14, 2025
4:30 PM - 6:30 PM

Rocye Hall, Rm 306

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The Center for European and Russian Studies, Center for Near Eastern Studies, UCLA CMRS Center for Early Global Studies, Department of European Languages and Transcultural Studies, Department of Near Eastern Languages and Cultures, and Center for the Study of Religion invite you to a new book salon, discussing Roberta Morosini's new book Dante, Moses and the Book of Islam. Visualizing the Qur’an from Byzantium to Filippino Lippi’s Adoration of the Golden Calf (Rome: L’Erma di Bretschneider, 2024).

About the Book

What does a flying bull with a half moon on its belly in Filippino Lippi’s 1502 painting, the Adoration of the Golden
Calf, have in common with Muhammad, as a character of Dante’s Comedy? This is the question that Roberta Morosini tries to answer by following the journey of a legend traveling in the Oriental Mediterranean. She argues that what Lippi’s painting and Dante’s Muhammad have in common is a legend of a celestial delivery of the “bull law,” the Qur’an and Moses’s Tablets of the Law. Just as Moses received the Tablets of the Law from God on Mount Sinai, the Qur’an, written according to Thomas Aquinas by mixing fables and a rippled Bible, is carried by the bull on its horns. Taking us from Medieval Christian Byzantium to the depictions of Muhammad and Averroës in the iconographic tradition, to the Rome of Oliviero Carafa in the events following the Fall of Constantinople in 1453 through Dante’s Comedy, the real protagonists of Dante, Moses and the Book of Islam, a story narrated through texts and images, are the Book and the Mediterranean as spaces of transmission of knowledge. Morosini provides a ground breaking reading of Lippi’s Adoration of the Golden Calf as an ancient scene of anti-Islam propaganda, while shedding new light on Dante’s construction of the cultural other, on his spaces of otherness, and on the importance the poet gives to books that bring unity and give form to what lacks it, like his book, the Comedy.

Speakers

Roberta Morosini (UCLA)
Massimo Ciavolella (UCLA)
Marino Forlino (Scripps College)
Akash Kumar (UC Berkeley)
M. Rahim Shayegan (UCLA)

In discussion with
Roberto Tottoli (University of Naples “L’ Orientale”)


Related Document: New-Book-Salon-Roberta-Morosini-Flyer-r1-d55.pdf

Sponsor(s): Center for European and Russian Studies, UCLA CMRS Center for Early Global Studies, Department of European Languages and Transcultural Studies, Department of Near Eastern Languages and Cultures, Center for the Study of Religion