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Realm of the Saint : Power and Authority in Moroccan Sufism
Realm of the Saint : Power and Authority in Moroccan Sufism
Author: Cornell, Vincent J.
Edition/Copyright: 1998
ISBN: 0-292-71210-3
Publisher: University of Texas Press
Type: Paperback
Used Print:  $32.25
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Author Bio
Review
Summary
 
  Author Bio

Cornell, Vincent J. : Duke University

Vincent J. Cornell is Associate Professor of Religion at Duke University.

 
  Review

"This is the most significant study of the Sufi tradition in Islam to have appeared in the last two decades. . . . It equals in scope and significance Peter Brown's The Cult of the Saints: Its Rise and Function in Latin Christianity."

--Dale F. Eickelman, Ralph and Richard Lazarus Professor of Anthropology and Human Relations, Dartmouth College

University of Texas Press Web Site, April, 2003

 
  Summary

In premodern Moroccan Sufism, sainthood involved not only a closeness to the Divine presence (walaya) but also the exercise of worldly authority (wilaya). The Moroccan Jazuliyya Sufi order used the doctrine that the saint was a "substitute of the prophets" and personification of a universal "Muhammadan Reality" to justify nearly one hundred years of Sufi involvement in Moroccan political life, which led to the creation of the sharifian state.

This book presents a systematic history of Moroccan Sufism through the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries C.E. and a comprehensive study of Moroccan Sufi doctrine, focusing on the concept of sainthood. Vincent J. Cornell engages in a sociohistorical analysis of Sufi institutions, a critical examination of hagiography as a source for history, a study of the Sufi model of sainthood in relation to social and political life, and a sociological analysis of more than three hundred biographies of saints. He concludes by identifying eight indigenous ideal types of saint that are linked to specific forms of authority. Taken together, they define sainthood as a socioreligious institution in Morocco.

 

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