Bloomsbury Home
- Home
- ACADEMIC
- Middle East
- Islamic Studies
- Sexuality and Islamic Spirituality in Early Malay Writings
Sexuality and Islamic Spirituality in Early Malay Writings
A Textual History of Sex and Gender
Sexuality and Islamic Spirituality in Early Malay Writings
A Textual History of Sex and Gender
You must sign in to add this item to your wishlist. Please sign in or create an account
Description
It is argued here that before the extensive formalization of sharia laws from the late nineteenth century onwards, Islam was prominently influenced by elements of enchantment and mysticism, mirrored in its textual portrayal of passionate and sexual relations.
This book's analysis is based on Malay manuscripts and texts about the body, sex, and sexuality. These include religious guidebooks on sexual techniques and etiquette, of which some are translated from the original Arabic or Persian, but almost all of which have been adapted for local Malay relevance. Also analyzed are collections of Malay erotic poetry from the sixteenth to nineteenth centuries and the only known female-authored early twentieth-century text on sex and women's sexual pleasure.
Over the centuries changing sexual norms and attitudes in the Malay world has disengaged sex and sexuality from being a crucial component of faith and spirituality-gradually receding into the discreet margins of contemporary discourse on gender relations.
Table of Contents
Acknowledgments
List of Abbreviations
By way of a prologue: Zulaikha the Paragon of Women's Passion in Islam
I. Passion
1. Passionate Spirituality Through a Sensuous “Feminine” Beloved
2. Reclaiming Eroticism from, and Reading Spiritualism into Animal Poetry
II. Paradise
3. The Kitab Jimak: A Manual on the “Science of Women” and Paradise on Earth
4. The Path to Pleasure is Orderly, and not One of Careless Abandon
5. A Vaginal Viewpoint: “Orgasm is Half of What to Expect in Heaven”
III. Propriety
6. Syariah Poetics on the Essentials of Marriage, Flawless Sex and a Pure Body
7. The Chaste Body at the Cusp of 20th-Century Modernity
By Way of an Epilogue: Zawiyah the Paragon of Women's Passionlessness in Islam
Bibliography
Contributors
Product details
Published | 24 Jul 2025 |
---|---|
Format | Ebook (Epub & Mobi) |
Edition | 1st |
Extent | 268 |
ISBN | 9780755648535 |
Imprint | I.B. Tauris |
Series | Gender and Islam |
Publisher | Bloomsbury Publishing |
About the contributors
Reviews
-
Sexuality and Islamic Spirituality in Early Malay Writings offers a fresh, interdisciplinary lens on Malay literature, uncovering ties between sexuality, spirituality, and gender. By challenging patriarchal narratives and illuminating female sexuality's spiritual dimensions, it redefines Islamic studies, gender discourse, and literary analysis-a must-read for anyone exploring religion, history, and human experience.
Ruzy Suliza Hashim, Professor, University of Economics and Human Sciences, Poland.
-
Deploying a feminist perspective, this landmark book traces the relationship between Islam and sexuality from the sixteenth century to the present. Speaking through a range of little-known sources, Malay voices, including women, offer their perspectives on the significance of sexual intimacy in Muslim lives. The authors have delivered a truly groundbreaking addition to Malay and Islamic studies.
Barbara Watson Andaya, Professor Emerita, University of Hawai'I, Hawai'i
-
Maznah Mohamad and Syahira Rasheed uncover here a sufistic textuality in which the pious subject not only prays and obeys the shariah but also achieves transcendence through sexual activity. They open up new possibilities in a scholarly field that has generally been content to accept a contemporary notion of female piety founded on the denial of passion, desire and sexual expression.
Julian Millie, Professor, Monash University, Australia

ONLINE RESOURCES
Bloomsbury Collections
This book is available on Bloomsbury Collections where your library has access.