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2002

6 x 9 in.
240 pp., 29 halftones, 2 maps, 5 graphs, 6 tables

ISBN: 978-0-292-70515-9
$45.00, hardcover with dust jacket
33% website discount: $30.15

Not for sale in South Asia

 
 
 
     

The Female Voice in Sufi Ritual
Devotional Practices in Pakistan and India

By Shemeem Burney Abbas
Foreword by Elizabeth Warnock Fernea

 

Table of Contents and Excerpt


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The female voice plays a more central role in Sufi ritual, especially in the singing of devotional poetry, than in almost any other area of Muslim culture. Female singers perform sufiana-kalam, or mystical poetry, at Sufi shrines and in concerts, folk festivals, and domestic life, while male singers assume the female voice when singing the myths of heroines in qawwali and sufiana-kalam. Yet, despite the centrality of the female voice in Sufi practice throughout South Asia and the Middle East, it has received little scholarly attention and is largely unknown in the West.

This book presents the first in-depth study of the female voice in Sufi practice in the subcontinent of Pakistan and India. Shemeem Burney Abbas investigates the rituals at the Sufi shrines and looks at women's participation in them, as well as male performers' use of the female voice. The strengths of the book are her use of interviews with both prominent and grassroots female and male musicians and her transliteration of audio- and videotaped performances. Through them, she draws vital connections between oral culture and the written Sufi poetry that the musicians sing for their audiences. This research clarifies why the female voice is so important in Sufi practice and underscores the many contributions of women to Sufism and its rituals.

Shemeem Burney Abbas is Professor of English Language and Applied Linguistics at Allama Iqbal Open University in Islamabad, Pakistan. She is currently teaching in the English Department of the University of Texas at Austin.


 Of Related Interest Aghaie, The Women of Karbala
Cornell, Realm of the Saint
 Offsite Review in H-Gender-Mideast

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