The man-like woman and the menstruating man: gendered discourses of purity and piety in male-authored Sufi writings

There are a number of oblique references in Sufi literature to pious women whose austerities resulted in the loss of their menstrual cycle, as well as pious men who ascribed to themselves a type of metaphorical menstruation as a method of self-disparagement. This article analyzes such references in...

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Bibliographic Details
Subtitles:"Special Issue: 'Physiology is Theology': Gendered Bodies in Sufi and Islamic Constructions of the Self"
Main Author: Abdel-Latif, Sara (Author)
Format: Electronic Article
Language:English
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Published: Equinox Publishing 2022
In: Body and religion
Year: 2022, Volume: 6, Issue: 1, Pages: 9-30
Standardized Subjects / Keyword chains:B Sufism / Literature / Menstruation / Gender-specific role / Masculinity / Fasting / Cultic purity / History 800-1300
RelBib Classification:AD Sociology of religion; religious policy
AG Religious life; material religion
BJ Islam
TE Middle Ages
Further subjects:B Hadith
B Menstruation
B Purity
B Gender
B Asceticism
B Sufism
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Summary:There are a number of oblique references in Sufi literature to pious women whose austerities resulted in the loss of their menstrual cycle, as well as pious men who ascribed to themselves a type of metaphorical menstruation as a method of self-disparagement. This article analyzes such references in relation to dominant medieval Sufi discourses of purity and piety, in order to investigate the gendered rhetoric and presuppositions that underlie explicit and implicit allusions to menstruation in Sufi texts. In isolating and analyzing allusions to menstruation, four categories of reference emerge: depersonalization of menstrual blood, metaphorical male menstruation, masculinization of pious women, and reification of amenorrheic women. These narrative strategies, although applied inconsistently, all contribute to an overall deliberate effort by male authors to justify the inclusion of female bodies in male-dominated discursive spaces, while ultimately perpetuating hegemonic theologies of sacred masculinity. Through examining these inconsistent applications of gender in male-authored Sufi writings, this analysis identifies new avenues for revisiting medieval Islamicate notions of gendered identity in society in ways that dismantle ahistorical binary models of gender that have often skewed readings of Sufi and medieval Muslim sources.
ISSN:2057-5831
Contains:Enthalten in: Body and religion
Persistent identifiers:DOI: 10.1558/bar.23377