"Guests of the Inmost Heart"

Conceptions of the Divine Beloved among Early Sufi Women

Authors

  • Maria M Dakake George Mason University

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1558/cis.v3i1.72

Keywords:

early sufi women, sufi literature, khabar genre

Abstract

In the works of Sufi love mysticism, the Sufi seeker is often represented as a male lover in relation to God as the symbolically “feminine” Beloved. However, women themselves were not infrequently the practitioners of the mystical path in Islam, and it is clear from the words attributed to them that female Sufis developed their own image of the Divine Beloved as the symbolically masculine object of their female desire. In this paper, I examine short poetic pieces and sayings attributed to Sufi women in both hagiographical and biographical works in an attempt to identify a specifically feminine brand of Islamic “love” mysticism, reflecting a distinctly and traditionally female experience of loving and spiritual longing.

Author Biography

  • Maria M Dakake, George Mason University

    Maria Massi Dakake is currently Associate Professor of Religious Studies at George Mason University, where she teaches courses on Islam as well as courses on women in religion. She is the author of The Charismatic Community: Shi`ite Identity in Early Islam (SUNY Press, 2007).

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Published

2008-10-19

Issue

Section

Articles

How to Cite

Dakake, M. M. (2008). "Guests of the Inmost Heart": Conceptions of the Divine Beloved among Early Sufi Women. Comparative Islamic Studies, 3(1), 72-97. https://doi.org/10.1558/cis.v3i1.72