oatmeal, “I don’t know if he did that, but it was a fast way of saying he took Egypt.” — Ridley Scott
Would have been far more interesting and timely if Ridley Scott hired John Tolan (“Faces of Muhammad”) as an advisor on the life of Napoleon… Juan Cole would have also saved him couple of embarrassing scenes.
“Napoleon had an idealised, bookish, Enlightenment vision of Islam as pure monotheism: indeed, the failure of his Egyptian expedition owed partly to his idea of Islam being quite different from the religion of Cairo’s ulama. Yet Napoleon was not alone in seeing himself as a new Muhammad: Goethe enthusiastically proclaimed that the emperor was the ‘Mahomet der Welt’ (Muhammad of the world), and the French author Victor Hugo portrayed him as a ‘Mahomet d’occident’ (Muhammad of the West). Napoleon himself, at the end of his life, exiled on Saint Helena and ruminating on his defeat, wrote about Muhammad and defended his legacy as a ‘great man who changed the course of history’. Napoleon’s Muhammad, conqueror and lawgiver, persuasive and charismatic, resembles Napoleon himself – but a Napoleon who was more successful, and certainly never exiled to a cold windswept island in the South Atlantic.”
Muhammad: an anticlerical hero of the European Enlightenment
https://aeon.co/ideas/muhammad-an-anticlerical-hero-of-the-european-enlightenment
Juan Cole on Ridley Scott's depiction of Napoleon in Egypt
https://yewtu.be/watch?v=XrHM_N8Uuno
See also (French):
John Tolan - Le Coran de Napoléon: https://mediaserver.univ-nantes.fr/videos/john-tolan-le-coran-de-napoleon/
Napoléon, ce nouveau prophète !
https://yewtu.be/watch?v=dBzS4oPhopY
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