SEX AND DESIRE IN MUSLIM CULTURES
Gender and Islam Series
Series Editors
Professor Nadia Al-Bagdadi, Central European University, Hungary
Professor Randi Deguilhem, National Institute of Scientific Research
(CNRS), France
Professor Bettina Dennerlein, University of Zurich, Switzerland
Advisory Board
Madawi Al-Rasheed, Middle East Centre, London School of Economics, UK
Kathryn Babayan, University of Michigan, USA
Jocelyne Cesari, Berkley Center, Georgetown University, USA, and University of
Birmingham, UK
Dawn Chatty, University of Oxford, UK
Nadia El Cheikh, American University of Beirut, Lebanon
Hoda Elsadda, Cairo University, Egypt
Ratna Ghosh, McGill University, Canada
Suad Joseph, UC Davis, USA
Published and Forthcoming Titles
Mainstreaming the Headscarf: Islamist Politics and Women in the Turkish Media,
Ezra Ozcan
Masculinities and Displacement in the Middle East: Syrian Refugees in Egypt,
Magdalena Suerbaum
Queer Muslims in Europe: Sexuality, Religion and Migration in Belgium,
Wim Peumans
Nadia Al-Bagdadi is Director of the Institute of Advanced Studies and Professor of History at Central European University, Budapest and Vienna. She received her doctoral degree from the Free University, Berlin, in 1996, in the field of Islamic Studies. She has held positions at the Free University, Berlin and the American University of Beirut, and has received a number of international fellowships. Among her publications are Vorgestellte ffentlichkeit: Zur Genese moderner Prosa in gypten 18601908 (2010) and Striking from the Margins: State, Religion and Devolution of Authority in the Middle East (2020), which she co-edited with Aziz Alazme and Harout Akdedian.
rvin Cemil Schick holds a PhD from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) and has taught at Harvard University, MIT and stanbul ehir University, as well as holding guest positions at Boston University, Sabanc University and Boazii University. He is the author, editor or co-editor of twelve books including The Erotic Margin: Sexuality and Spatiality in Alteritist Discourse (1999) and Writing the Body, Society, and the Universe: On Islam, Gender, and Culture (in Turkish, 2011). He is currently working on a second doctorate at the Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales; his thesis concerns occult practices in Islam, with special emphasis on their legitimation.
Mriam Cheikh is Lecturer in Anthropology at the Institut national des langues et civilisations orientales (Inalco), Paris. She is an anthropologist specializing in the study of the moral dissent of young people from the working classes in Morocco. Her work focuses on the transformation processes of sexuality, intimacy and gender relations at work in juvenile counter cultures. She was a Marie Skodowska-Curie Fellow in the Department of Islamic and Middle Eastern Studies at the University of Edinburgh and a research fellow at OpenEdition-CNRS. She recently published Les filles qui sortent: Jeunesse, sexualit et prostitution au Maroc (2020).
Nijmi Edres is Postdoctoral Research Fellow at the Georg-Eckert Institute in Braunschweig, Germany. She was awarded a PhD in Islamic civilization from the University of Rome Sapienza. Before moving to Braunschweig, she held positions at Gttingen University and Exeter University. Among her recent publications are Donne palestinesi in Israele: Levoluzione del diritto musulmano allombra del conflitto (2019) and Uses of the Past: Shara and Gender in Legal Theory and Practice in Palestine and Israel (2018), which she co-edited with Irene Schneider.
Aymon Kreil is Assistant Professor at the Department of Languages and Cultures and co-director of the Centre for Anthropological Research on Affect and Materiality (CARAM) at Ghent University. He has conducted most of his research on love, sex and desire in Egypt. His work has been published in the Journal of Middle East Women Studies, Arab Studies Journal, Critique internationale, Archives de Sciences sociales des religions and La Ricerca folklorica. Recently, he has co-edited the books Reinventing Love: Gender, Intimacy and Romance in the Arab World (2018) and Making Sense of Change: Methodological Approaches to Societies in Transformation (forthcoming).
Erica Li Lundqvist is Senior Lecturer in Comparative Religions at the University of Malm, Sweden. She has a PhD in Islamic studies and her doctoral thesis, Gayted Communities: Marginalized Sexualities in Lebanon, opened up virgin territory with extensive empirical material. Her recent publications include research on the intersection of sexuality and religion, attempting to put queer theory in dialogue with the study of leaving religion. She recently published Leaving Islam from a Queer Perspective, in the Handbook of Leaving Religion (2020) and Den skeva vagen: Queera strategier bland homosexuella muslimska man, in i Levd Religion: Det heliga i vardagen (2018).
Danilo Marino received his PhD in 2015 from both Universit degli Studi di Napoli LOrientale and INALCO in Paris. From 2018 to 2019, he was a postdoctoral fellow at the Berlin Graduate School Muslim Cultures and Societies. His current research is devoted to the evolution of the notion of muruwwa in pre-modern Arabic and Islamic sources and models of masculinities as portrayed in Medieval Arabic historiography and literature. His publications include Hashish and Food: Arabic and European Medieval Dreams of Edible Paradises, in Insatiable Appetite (2019) and Raconter livresse lpoque mamelouke: Les mangeurs de haschich comme motif littraire, in Annales Islamologiques (2015).
Achim Rohde is a Middle East historian and the academic coordinator of Academy in Exiles Critical Thinking Residency Program at the Free University, Berlin. Academy in Exile is a joint institutional platform for supporting scholars at risk from across the globe, supported by the Turkish Studies Department at the University of Duisburg-Essen, the Kulturwissenschaftliches Institut (Institute for Advanced Study in the Humanities, KWI) in Essen, the Berlin-based Forum Transregionale Studien and the Free University, Berlin. Rohdes research focuses on the modern and contemporary history of the Middle East and North Africa. He recently co-edited Nationalism and Sexualities in Transregional Perspective: The Homophobic Argument (2018).
Johannes Thomann gained his PhD in 1992 from the University of Zurich. He is now retired. His main interest lies in the history of science in the Islamic world. Among his publications are Studien zum Speculum physionomie des Michele Savonarola (1997) and, with Mattias Vogel, Schattenspur: Sonnenfinsternisse in Wissenschaft, Kunst und Mythos