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Queer companions : religion, public intimacy, and saintly affects in Pakistan / Omar Kasmani.

By: Kasmani, Omar [author.]Material type: TextTextPublisher: Durham : Duke University Press, 2022Description: 208 pContent type: text Media type: unmediated Carrier type: volumeISBN: 9781478015413; 9781478018032Subject(s): Qalandar Lal Shahbaz, 1177-1274 -- Shrines | Shrine of Lal Shahbaz Qalander (Sehwan, Pakistan) | Sufis -- Pakistan -- Sehwan | Sufism -- Pakistan -- Sehwan | Fakirs -- Pakistan -- Sehwan | Sexual minority community -- Pakistan -- Sehwan | Ethnology -- Pakistan -- Sehwan | Muslim pilgrims and pilgrimages -- Pakistan -- Sehwan | SOCIAL SCIENCE / Anthropology / Cultural & Social | HISTORY / Asia / India & South AsiaAdditional physical formats: Online version:: Queer companionsDDC classification: 297.4 LOC classification: BP188.8.P182 | S449 2022
Contents:
On Coming Close -- Infrastructures of the Imaginal -- Her Stories in His Durbar -- In Other Guises, Other Futures -- Love in a Time of Celibacy -- Fakirs, Fairies, and the Dead -- Queer Forward Slash Religion.
Summary: "Queer Companions is an ethnographic account of Sufi fakirs at Pakistan's most important Sufi site, the shrine of Lal Shahbaz Qalander. Omar Kasmani argues that these pilgrims' affective connections to the site's patron saint, who lived and died in the thirteenth century, lead them to queer forms of living. While some of the ethnographic interlocutors in the book are themselves LGBTQI, and a few are women who trouble the gendered ordering of the shrine, Kasmani attends to the queer forms of relationality, intimacy, and affinity that the site allows for rather than on the individual identities of the people themselves. He shows how their relation to the world is altered by embodied and imaginative modes of moving away from social objects and expectations and toward the saintly. As the site is a state-run national heritage site, Kasmani considers how this form of queer living brings individuals, society, and the state together through a public architecture of intimacy. In tracing the veering paths of these religious figures, Kasmani demonstrates how this form of intimacy might offer not a withdrawal from the world, but rather a different kind of queer worldmaking"-- Provided by publisher.
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Item type Current library Collection Call number Status Date due Barcode
Book Book Marium Abdulla Library
Non-Ref
Liberal Arts 297.4 KAS (Browse shelf (Opens below)) Available 21029

Includes bibliographical references and index.

On Coming Close -- Infrastructures of the Imaginal -- Her Stories in His Durbar -- In Other Guises, Other Futures -- Love in a Time of Celibacy -- Fakirs, Fairies, and the Dead -- Queer Forward Slash Religion.

"Queer Companions is an ethnographic account of Sufi fakirs at Pakistan's most important Sufi site, the shrine of Lal Shahbaz Qalander. Omar Kasmani argues that these pilgrims' affective connections to the site's patron saint, who lived and died in the thirteenth century, lead them to queer forms of living. While some of the ethnographic interlocutors in the book are themselves LGBTQI, and a few are women who trouble the gendered ordering of the shrine, Kasmani attends to the queer forms of relationality, intimacy, and affinity that the site allows for rather than on the individual identities of the people themselves. He shows how their relation to the world is altered by embodied and imaginative modes of moving away from social objects and expectations and toward the saintly. As the site is a state-run national heritage site, Kasmani considers how this form of queer living brings individuals, society, and the state together through a public architecture of intimacy. In tracing the veering paths of these religious figures, Kasmani demonstrates how this form of intimacy might offer not a withdrawal from the world, but rather a different kind of queer worldmaking"-- Provided by publisher.

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