From the fifteenth-century onwards, followers of the Sufi poet Shah Ne'matullah Vali navigated land and sea routes through Central Asia, Iran, and India, acting as agents of power, mobility, and cross-cultural exchange. Along the way, they built shrines whose poetry, spatial configuration, and materiality created intimate religious spaces that engaged local audiences, invoked distant places, and brought together pilgrims, itinerant artists, merchants, and courtiers from many regions.
Pushing back against global art history trajectories that have privileged east-west connections as well as studies of Islamic art in South Asia that have largely focused on the Mughal Empire, Intimacies of Global Sufism explores the opportunities and challenges that Sufis encountered in developing a transregional network of material culture. Using the concept of intimacy to highlight the shrines' affective interconnections between people, objects, and ideas, author Peyvand Firouzeh invites readers to step inside these significant but understudied sacred spaces and rethink their wider religious and material significance. Looking closely at sites ranging across thousands of kilometers, this book combines a detailed analysis of architecture, objects of ritual, and manuscripts, with local and dynastic histories, Sufi poems, patronage documents, and a unique focus on the disciple-artists who created these spaces. Moving between small spaces and global perspectives allows us to make sense of two seemingly contradictory sides of Sufi material culture: its tendency toward asceticism, and its investment in monuments and transregional connections.
Richly illustrated with more than 140 images of these sites, their architecture, and their artifacts, Intimacies of Global Sufism offers readers a new vantage point on the early modern world and the making of transregional community through sacred spaces.
Intimacies of Global Sufism is the recipient of College Art Association's Millard Meiss Publication Fund, The Barakat Trust Publication Award, The New Foundation for Art History Publication Subvention Grant, and the Persian Heritage Foundation Publication Grant.
Acknowledgments
Note to the Reader
Introduction
Part One: Shrine Diplomacy between Kerman, Yazd, and the Deccan
1. Shrines, Thresholds, Palimpsests: The Portal at Mahan
2. Across the Arabian Sea: Gift Diplomacy in an Expanding Shrine Network
3. Shrines, Cosmos, Territory: The Making of the Taft Khanaqah
Part Two: Distance, Intimacy, Substitution: Strategies of Self-Representation
4. Betwixt and Between: The Sacred and Material in Taft and Mahan
5. Inscribing as Belonging: Architecture, Textile, Ritual
Part Three: Patronage and Authorship Inside-Out
6. The Architecture of Intimate Alliances and Competitions
7. Patronage Beyond the Court, Sufis Beyond the Shrine
8. Mahan's Chelleh-Khaneh and the Disciple-Artist: The Poetics and Politics of the Sufi Body
Epilogue: The Fragility of Transregionality
Appendices
Bibliography
Index
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