Gendering madness

figuring the majdhuba in modern Moroccan hagiography

Authors

  • Brittany Landorf Emory University

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1558/bar.23222

Keywords:

Sufism, gender, madness, majdhūba, hagiography, Muhammad ibn Ja‘far al-Kattānī, Morocco

Abstract

In this article, I examine what narratives of enraptured madness (jadhb) and the figure of the mad female saint (majdhuba) reveal about the articulation of gendered saintly orthodoxy within the modern Moroccan hagiographical compendium Salwat al-Anfas wa-Muhadathat al-Akyas bi-man Uqbira min al-‘Ulama’ wa’l-Sulaha’ bi-Fas (The entertainment of souls and the discourse of the wise concerning the scholars and the Sufis who in Fez met their demise). Written by the nineteenth-century Moroccan historian and Sufi, Muhammad ibn Ja‘far al-Kattani, this text draws on and also plays with the genre of Sufi hagiography. Because it is arranged as a ‘tomb visiting guide,’ it appears to scatter traditional vestiges of Sufi hierarchies and rhetorical organization strategies, presenting a composite picture of Sufi sainthood. However, al-Kattani also reaffirms entrenched gendered hierarchies of spiritual authority. Throughout Salwat al-Anfas, al-Kattani’s depiction of the majdhuba acts as a literary foil for the paradigm of the ‘good Sufi woman’ or normative female sainthood. Although al-Kattani includes narratives of the majdhuba that depict potentially transgressive gender performances experienced within the state of enraptured madness – such as uncovering the body, growing a beard, babbling, gossiping, and acting aggressively in public spaces – these deviant performances serve to solidify normative modes of sainthood. Or, in other words, enraptured madness sticks to certain saints more than others, creating gendered hierarchies of spiritual authority.

Author Biography

  • Brittany Landorf, Emory University

    Brittany Landorf is a doctoral candidate in the Graduate Division of Religion at Emory University in Atlanta, Georgia. Her research explores the dynamic of ethics, gender, and madness in Sufi thought and practice. Her writing has appeared in the Journal of Islamic Ethics and Practical Matters. Her research has been supported by the Fulbright Foundation and the American Institute for Maghrib Studies. She received a BA from Macalester College and an MTS in Islamic Studies from Harvard Divinity School.

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Published

2023-05-16

How to Cite

Gendering madness: figuring the majdhuba in modern Moroccan hagiography. (2023). Body and Religion, 6(1), 47-73. https://doi.org/10.1558/bar.23222