Kese and Tellak: Cultural Framings of Body Treatments in the ‘Turkish Bath’

Author:

Hahn Kornelia

Abstract

Using water for body treatments has an especially long tradition in many cultures and, is deeply intertwined with Roman and Ottoman culture. However, it is clear that today it is not possible to attribute bathing – not even a specific type of bathing, such as the hammam steam bath – to one particular culture (ignoring the obvious problems associated with trying to delineate clearly between such blurred constructs as a specific culture or as a discrete entity). Thus, the ‘Turkish bath’ is a widely used term introduced to Europe in the eighteenth century or applied to various different manifestations. The term reflects the European perception of Turkish bathing culture, primarily connected with bathing within a hammam complex or – as the Turkish term goes – a hammami. Bathing in the hammam-style is rather a Roman cultural practice, an element adapted and integrated in Ottoman culture and readapted thereafter into modern Western culture. It is often believed that these practices are rooted in the cultural history of the present state of Turkey (although ancient ‘Turkish bath’ architecture famously exists in Greece or Albania, too1). Furthermore, the geographical or architectural nexus between mosques and hammams and, also, the temporal order of Islamic culture (in which visiting a hammam before various ritual occasions is required) have often suggested seeing the Turkish bath as a religious custom.

Publisher

Cambridge University Press (CUP)

Subject

Political Science and International Relations,Geography, Planning and Development

Reference9 articles.

1. The ‘Hammām’: a space between heaven and hell;Van Gelder;Quadernie di Studi Arabi, Nuova Serie,2008

2. The women's quarters in the historicalhammam

3. FOR HEALTH AND PLEASURE: THE TURKISH BATH IN VICTORIAN IRELAND

4. 1. Gall C. (2001) A nation challenged: women's traditions

5. 2. back to the old bathhouse: free to laugh once again. Accessed online: http://www.nytimes.com/2001/12/23/world/nation-challenged-women-s-traditions-back-old-bathhouse-free-laugh-once-again.html (download 19 September 2014).

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