The Latin word for mirror is “speculum” from which the French word “spéculation” and its English sister “speculation” are derived. Both mean monitoring the sky and its scattered stars through a mirror, and also contemplation and deep mental reflection.
In that context, mirror reflections are linked to contemplation and observation, as each process of meditation or contemplation is born through a mirror’s reflection.
When light beams stem from one object and hit another, a photorefraction occurs that reflects the image of that object. If one were to stand above a pond of water or face a piece of bronze, silver, or glass, one would behold a personal image reflected in that still water or polished bronze, silver, or crystal.
Intangible mirrors
However, there are other kinds of intangible mirrors that also reflect us to ourselves, such as the eyes of other people, and the mirrors of the past and the present. This is particularly evident in how we build and shape our identities through connecting with our culture and heritage.
At the same time, we Arabs are also confronted with Western perceptions of our own culture, be it in the paintings, tales, novels, films, theatre plays, music, or even jokes made by the West about us, our societies, and our history.