"The Body is a Tool for Remembrance": Healing, Transformation and the Instrumentality of the Body in a North American Sufi Order
Document Type
Book Chapter
Publication Date
1-1-2024
Department 1
Religious Studies
Abstract
The Religious Body Imagined examines the ways in which the human body has been imagined, imaged, and discursively produced in particular places, times, and religious traditions.
This book brings together representative papers from most of the world’s major traditions and geo-historical locations, and explores the religious body’s various functions, roles, and transformative effects through a range of disciplinary and theoretical lenses (e.g. visual culture, literary, performance and cultural studies, ethnography, space / place, ritual, postcolonial theory and social justice as it pertains to embodiment). Most significantly, it is organized according to novel, thought-provoking thematic foci that advance the field and can be generative for classroom use. Specifically, it includes twelve chapters organized into sections on the Gendered Body, LGBTQ Bodies, Migrating Bodies, Host Bodies, Sensational Bodies, and National Bodies.
The Religious Body Imagined contributes new and original research as well as theoretical insights that can substantially help to expand our understanding of the interdisciplinary field of religion and body in general.
This particular chapter focuses on the healing practices of North American Muslims of Shadiliyya lineage.
ISBN/ISSN
9781781799727
Version
Version of Record
Recommended Citation
Sijapati, Megan Adamson, ""The Body is a Tool for Remembrance": Healing, Transformation and the Instrumentality of the Body in a North American Sufi Order" (2024). Religious Studies Faculty Publications. 57.
https://cupola.gettysburg.edu/relfac/57
Required Publisher's Statement
This book is available from the publisher's website: https://www.equinoxpub.com/home/religious-body/.