Abstract
The Question of Literary Taste: A Close Look at the Court of al-???ib Ibn ?Abb?d
Sociology of culture, and in particular the studies undertaken by Pierre Bourdieu, replaced the
essentialist notion of taste long dominant in philosophical and literary aesthetics with a relational
conception firmly tying taste to the dynamics of class inequalities. This important conceptual shift,
rejecting the treatment of taste as spontaneous individual preferences and instead contextualizing
and historicizing it to become inseparable from wider social groups and trends, has methodological
implications beyond modern or Western societies, and is definitely pertinent to the study of
medieval Arabic literature and literary criticism. This approach to taste (and the questions it yields)
has not been adopted by scholars in the field. This may have to do with the tendency to study
medieval literature literary criticism abstractly without attempting to connect them to the social
settings of the era, for the fragmentary nature of the evidence and the difficulty of developing a
suitable methodology. My paper is an attempt to demonstrate the importance of this approach
through a proper test case.
Al-???ib Ibn ?Abb?d (326-85/938-95) was a notable prose writer, poet and literary critic (among
other things). The fact that besides possessing literary and linguistic competences he was also a
vizier of two B?yid am?rs and a patron of one of the greatest courts in the 4th/10th century, in which
poets and prose writers swarmed, raises several interesting issues connected with the question of
taste: what was his personal literary taste and how was it connected with his social background?
What bearings did it have on his protégés? Can we observe for the obvious power inequality an
attempt on their part to adapt their production to his taste? If yes, what were the means by which
he propagated his preferences to be adapted by the court poets?
In brief, the conclusions reached show al-???ib’s taste as leaning to ‘natural’ (ma?b??) style in poetry
while artful (or ‘artificial’: ma?n??) in prose, which is characteristic of his social group, namely, the
secretaries (kutt?b); although the poets to a large extent respond to al-???ib’s preferred style,
especially in formal events, the non-hegemonic artful style is still represented and poets known for
it are co-opted. That indicates a non-dogmatic approach on the part of the patron, who despite his
widely-known stylistic preferences does not pursue a rigid uncompromising selection, co-optation
and evaluation processes.
Discipline
Geographic Area
Sub Area