Contrary to many claims, Sufism is not a gender-neutral discourse and practice. Although women have been present since the inception of Sufism in the eighth century CE, like most androcentric knowledge, the foundational discourse of Sufism is defined by male interest and male privilege. Seeking to address the gender bias in Persian Sufism, this dissertation offers a feminist interdisciplinary examination of Persian Sufism through various forms of textual analysis—linguistic, psychoanalytic, formal—in different fields of study: religious studies, medieval historiography, literature, and ethnography. Through analysis and interpretation of some of the foundational texts of Persian Sufism written from the 10th to the 13th century CE—Hujwiri’s K...
This paper suggests that Sufism offers contemporary Islamic feminists valuable resources to creative...
This article is an inquiry into the nature of the female mystic and the divine feminine in Sufi expe...
In the medieval Middle East, the Sufi experience was not only a male enterprise. Women also particip...
Medieval Sufis reoriented the practice of Islamic mysticism away from asceticism and towards a struc...
The following paper will explore women participation in the Sufism movement. Sufism is a mystical mo...
There are many negative preconceptions about Islam and especially how Islam affects men and women. W...
In the history of Sufism, the presence of mystic women have been ignored and they have largely remai...
Studies on gender in medieval and modern Sufism have tended to posit two extremes: Sufism as an oasi...
This book offers a specialized study focusing on the phenomenon of the female mystic and the divine ...
The historical evidence suggests that women and men have been considered equal in the path of Tasawu...
The lack of records about the involvement and contribution of women in Sufism texts cannot be used a...
Generally, Sufism is understood as “the mystical knowledge of the Nearness to God”. Sufism, as a rel...
Gender discourse in sufism tends to attract attentions. Such charm emerges due to the fact that the ...
This article seeks to explore the severe history of Sufi figures from the female group with the aim ...
My dissertation addresses the question: what does an exploration of sexual politics within Islam loo...
This paper suggests that Sufism offers contemporary Islamic feminists valuable resources to creative...
This article is an inquiry into the nature of the female mystic and the divine feminine in Sufi expe...
In the medieval Middle East, the Sufi experience was not only a male enterprise. Women also particip...
Medieval Sufis reoriented the practice of Islamic mysticism away from asceticism and towards a struc...
The following paper will explore women participation in the Sufism movement. Sufism is a mystical mo...
There are many negative preconceptions about Islam and especially how Islam affects men and women. W...
In the history of Sufism, the presence of mystic women have been ignored and they have largely remai...
Studies on gender in medieval and modern Sufism have tended to posit two extremes: Sufism as an oasi...
This book offers a specialized study focusing on the phenomenon of the female mystic and the divine ...
The historical evidence suggests that women and men have been considered equal in the path of Tasawu...
The lack of records about the involvement and contribution of women in Sufism texts cannot be used a...
Generally, Sufism is understood as “the mystical knowledge of the Nearness to God”. Sufism, as a rel...
Gender discourse in sufism tends to attract attentions. Such charm emerges due to the fact that the ...
This article seeks to explore the severe history of Sufi figures from the female group with the aim ...
My dissertation addresses the question: what does an exploration of sexual politics within Islam loo...
This paper suggests that Sufism offers contemporary Islamic feminists valuable resources to creative...
This article is an inquiry into the nature of the female mystic and the divine feminine in Sufi expe...
In the medieval Middle East, the Sufi experience was not only a male enterprise. Women also particip...