"Peteet has written an impressive, and perhaps the definitive, book on the hammam in the Mediterranean region."—Faedah M. Totah, author of Preserving the Old City of Damascus
"With theoretical interventions rippling from the spatial to the sensorial, labor to sexuality, ritual to tourism, Peteet has gifted us an invigorating, definitive book on the hammam, past and present."—Lara Deeb, coauthor of Anthropology's Politics Disciplining the Middle East
"Peteet has given us both a sweeping genealogy of baths across the Mediterranean world and a granular ethnography of the revival of hammams in twenty-first century Turkey and Jordan."—Nora Elizabeth Barakat, author of Bedouin Bureaucrats: Mobility and Property in the Ottoman Empire
"I am struck by the originality and ambition of this insightful project."—Aseel Sawalha, author of Reconstructing Beirut: Memory and Space in a Postwar Arab City
"Peteet takes us on a fascinating historical voyage of the hammam as a signature institution of the Mediterranean region for centuries."—Anne Meneley, author of Tournaments of Value
Description
Julie Peteet offers a fascinating tour through the rich cultural history of hammams, or baths, in the Mediterranean and Middle East. These sacred structures date back to the Bronze and Iron Ages and have evolved through the Hellenistic, Roman, Byzantine, and Islamic periods. In this original work, Peteet provides the first comprehensive examination of hammams through their architecture, labor pool, clientele, meanings, notions of the body and hygiene, and economy. Exploring the hammam as both a tangible architectural structure and an intangible social practice, Peteet sheds light on how the bath has functioned as a central hub of religious ceremonies and a space that transcends any specific religious affiliation.
Although hammams have experienced a decline due to modernization, new domestic technologies, and rejection of the Ottoman-Islamic past, their current reinvigorated form illuminates neoliberal conceptions of heritage and leisure industries. Hammams have become spaces for cleansing and fashioning a gendered and aesthetically appropriate body as defined by a global wellness syndrome. Peteet’s captivating narrative traces the hammam’s historical significance and contemporary role as both a sacred and profane cultural phenomenon.
Table of Contents
Introduction
1. Genealogy I: Neolithic to Byzantium
2. Genealogy II: Early Islam to the Ottomans
3. Why Now? Culture and Body in Motion
4. The Hammam as Spatial Practice and Rite of Passage
5. The Hammam as a Sensorium
6. Danger in the Hammam: From the Supernatural to Murder
7. Heritage, Tourism, Commodification, and Wellness
8. Laboring in the Hammam
Conclusion
About the Author
Julie Peteet is professor emerita of anthropology at the University of Louisville. She is the author of Space and Mobility in Palestine, Landscape of Hope and Despair: Palestinian Refugee Camps, and Gender in Crisis: Women and the Palestinian Resistance Movement.
May 2024