From Shamanism to Sufism : Women, Islam and Culture in Central Asia. için kapak resmi
From Shamanism to Sufism : Women, Islam and Culture in Central Asia.
Başlık:
From Shamanism to Sufism : Women, Islam and Culture in Central Asia.
Yazar:
Sultanova, Razia.
ISBN:
9780857731821
Yazar Ek Girişi:
Basım Bilgisi:
1st ed.
Fiziksel Tanımlama:
1 online resource (256 pages)
Seri:
International Library of Central Asia Studies
İçerik:
Cover -- Contents -- List of Illustrations -- Map of Central Asia -- Acknowledgements -- Preface -- 1. Historical Overview -- 1. Early Religious Overview -- 2. Islam in Central Asia -- 3. Central Asia Under Russian and Soviet Rule -- 4. 'Land Ploughed by Cultural Revolution' -- 2. Shamanism in Nomadic Culture -- 5. Theory and Practice -- 6. How to become a Shaman? -- 7. Women and Shamanism in Central Asia -- 8. Epic Forms: Kyrgyz Heroic Manas -- 9. Shamanism and Islam -- 3. Sufism in Central Asia -- 10. Historical Development -- 11. Main Tariqahs of Central Asia: Naqshbandiyya, kubraviyya, Yassaviya, and Qadiriyya -- 12. Zikr in the Ferghana Valley: Male Society -- 4. Female Sufism -- 13. Historical Overview -- 14. Sufi Poetry in Central Asia: Ghazal and Female Poets -- 5. Transmission of Sacred Knowledge in Its Connection to Sufi Tradition -- 15. Ustad -Shogird Training in Medieval Sources -- 16. Ustad-Shogird Tradition Today -- 17. Mehterlik or Professional Guilds -- 18. Hofizlik: Professional Training in Music -- 6. Music and Female Sufis -- 19. Sufi Masters in Music -- 20. Sufi Music in Central Asia: From court to Folk Traditions -- 21. Central Asian Sufi Music and Female Singers -- 22. Female Maqam Singers -- 23. Munojat Yulchieva -- 24. Sufi Origin Genre Katta Ashula -- 7. Interaction of Shamanism and Sufism in Central Asian Female Performance -- 25. From Healing Rituals to Protective Songs -- 26. Female Shamanism in Turkmenistan -- 27. Galeke: The Kazakh Shaman -- 28. Female Shamanism in Tajikistan -- 29. Elements of Shamanism and Sufism in Uzbek Folk Music -- 8. Musical Instruments and Dance in Female Communities -- 30. Musical Instruments: From Shamanism to Sufism -- 31. Dutar -- 32. Dances in Central Asian Culture -- 9. Female Folk Sufism -- 33. Female Religious Practices -- 34. Otin-Oy as Female Sufi Pir.

35. How to become an Otin-Oy: Malika Asqarova's case -- 36. Sufi Rituals Led by Otin-Oy -- 37. Zikr -- 38. Current Situation: Female Religious School in Bukhara -- 10. Female Rituals -- 39. Other Rituals led by Otin-Oy -- 40. Classification of Religious Rituals led by Otin-Oy -- 41. O'Qish (Readings) as a Ritual Session -- 42. Pre-Islamic Practices: Mushkul Kushod -- 43. Female Rites of Passage -- 44. Toy (Wedding Celebration) as a Sufi Feast -- 45. Calendar Rituals Led by Otin-Oy -- 46. Otin-Oy in Uzbek Pop Culture -- 11. Similar Female Rituals in the Turkic-Speaking World (in Tatar, Azeri, Turkish, Cypriot, and Afghani Traditions) -- 47. Turkic Rituals and Cerimonies -- 48. How Musical are Female Rituals? -- Conclusion -- Appendix: Female Poetry -- Notes -- Glossary -- Bibliography -- Index.
Özet:
Women have traditionally played a vital part in Islam throughout Central Asia - the vast area from the Caspian Sea to Siberia. With this ground-breaking and original study, Razia Sultanova examines the experiences of Muslim women in the region and the ways in which religion has shaped their daily lives and continues to do so today. 'From Shamanism to Sufism' explores the fundamental interplay between religious belief and the cultural heritage of music and dance and is the first book to focus particularly on the role of women. Based on evidence derived from over fifteen years of field work, 'From Shamanism to Sufism' shows how women kept alive traditional Islamic religious culture in Central Asia, especially through Shamanism and Sufism, even under Soviet rule when all religion was banned. Nowhere was the role of women more important than in the Ferghana Valley in Uzbekistan, the cradle of female Islamic culture and a centre for women's poetry and music. This area is home to the 'Otin-Oy', a sisterhood of religiously educated women and members of Sufi orders, who take a leading part in rituals, marking the pivotal moments in the Islamic calendar and maintaining religious practices through music and ritual dances. Sultanova shows how the practice of Islam in Uzbekistan has evolved over time: long underground, there was a religious resurgence at independence in 1991, boosting national Uzbek identity and nationalism - 500 new mosques were built - only to be followed by a return to persecution by a repressive state under the banner of the 'war against terror'. Now events have come full circle, and once again covert worship by women remains crucial to the survival of traditional Muslim culture. Ritual and music are at the heart of Central Asian and Islamic culture, not only at weddings and funerals but in all aspects of everyday life. Through her

in-depth analysis of these facets of cultural life within Central Asian society, 'From Shamanism to Sufism' offers important insights into the lives of the societies in the region. The role of women has often been neglected in studies of religious culture and this book fills an enormous gap, restoring women to their rightful historical and cultural context. It will be essential reading for anyone with a serious interest in the History or Religion of Central Asia or in Global Islam..
Notlar:
Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, 2017. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries.
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