Reprint

Sufism in the Modern World

Edited by
June 2024
180 pages
  • ISBN978-3-7258-1359-9 (Hardback)
  • ISBN978-3-7258-1360-5 (PDF)

This book is a reprint of the Special Issue Sufism in the Modern World that was published in

Social Sciences, Arts & Humanities
Summary

Since the advent of the “modern” age, the main mystical trend of Islam, namely Sufism, has become the target of novel, multifaceted criticism in the Muslim World. The strong denunciation of “folk” Sufism by Muslim purists and fundamentalists of the eighteenth century onwards—who often consider mystical Islam to be a major part of, and reason for, the deviation from an imagined, pristine Islam—was followed by a fresh wave of Sufi antagonism by a group of Muslim modernists and secular thinkers from the nineteenth century, who regard Sufism as something belonging to the past and thus incompatible with the present. Notwithstanding these intense and multifarious critiques, Sufism has remained an active part of Muslim life and culture in both Muslim-majority and Muslim-minority areas, even extending its presence to new spheres such as Europe and America. The current Special Issue analyzes and examines different aspects of such vibrant activity and scrutinizes the dynamics of the beliefs, practices, institutions, interpretations, conceptualizations, and aesthetics of Sufism in the modern world. It offers its readership a broad and multidisciplinary perspective on the contemporary vitality of mystical Islam and addresses the issue through various academic fields such as religious/Islamic studies, intellectual history, sociology, anthropology, philosophy, gender studies, and minority studies. Contributors to this volume have demonstrated that Sufism, like Islam itself, should be understood and studied “in context” and with regard to its constant change-in-continuity.

Format
  • Hardback
License and Copyright
© 2024 by the authors; CC BY-NC-ND license
Keywords
Sufism; Islamic mysticism; shari‘a; contemporary; intra-Islamic debates; Charles Taylor; Sufism; radical reflexivity; inwardness; inner depths; self; bewilderment; Islamic mysticism; Sufism in the West; contemporary Sufism; neo-Sufism; New Religious Movements (NRMs); history of ideas; dynamics of religion; resonance; Bektashism; Albania; Sufism; Balkans; nationalism; Sufism; contemporary art; aesthetic turn; diasporic art; decoloniality; migration; transculturality; gender equality; female spiritual leadership; mysticism; Sufism; Bektashism; gender and Sufi ethics; Sufism; yoga; Mujaddidiyya; pure Muhammadi path; India; Indo-Muslim culture; n/a

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