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The Cambridge companion to Sufism [electronic resource] / edited by Lloyd Ridgeon, University of Glasgow.

Contributor Ridgeon, Lloyd V. J. editor.

ImprintCambridge : Cambridge University Press, 2015.

Description1 online resource (xvi, 310 pages) : digital, PDF file(s).

Note:Title from publisher's bibliographic system (viewed on 09 Nov 2015).

Note:Origins and early Sufism / Christopher Melchert -- 2. Early Pious, Mystic Sufi Women / Laury Silvers -- 3. Early Sufi Rituals, Beliefs, and Hermeneutics / Erik S. Ohlander -- 4. Morality in Early Sufi Literature / Saeko Yazaki -- 5. Antinomian Sufis / Ahmet T. Karamustafa -- 6. Mysticism in Medieval Sufism / Lloyd Ridgeon -- 7. Sufism's Religion of Love, from Rabi'a to Ibn 'Arabi / Leonard Lewisohn -- 8. Nana Asma'u: Nineteenth-Century West African Sufi / Beverly Mack -- 9. Sufism and Colonialism / Knut S. Vikır -- 10. Sufism in the West / Ron Geaves -- 11. Sufism in the Age of Globalization / Itzchak Weismann -- 12. Transnationalism and Regional Cults / Pnina Werbner.

Note:Sufism, the mystical or aesthetic doctrine in Islam, has occupied a very specific place in the Islamic tradition, with its own history, literature and devotional practices. Its development began in the seventh century and spread throughout the Islamic world. The Cambridge Companion to Sufism traces its evolution from the formative period to the present, addressing specific themes along the way within the context of the times. In a section discussing the early period, the devotional practices of the earliest Sufis are considered. The section on the medieval period, when Sufism was at its height, examines Sufi doctrines, different forms of mysticism and the antinomian expressions of Sufism. The section on the modern period explains the controversies that surrounded Sufism, the changes that took place in the colonial period and how Sufism transformed into a transnational movement in the twentieth century. This inimitable volume sheds light on a multifaceted and alternative aspect of Islamic history and religion.

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Contributor
Ridgeon, Lloyd V. J. editor.
Series Statement
Cambridge companions to religion
Subject:
Sufism.
Mysticism -- Islam.
Series Added Entry-Uniform title
Cambridge companions to religion.