Queer Companions: Religion, Public Intimacy, and Saintly Affects in Pakistan

Date
Thu November 10th 2022, 12:00 - 1:00pm
Event Sponsor
Center for South Asia
Abbasi Program in Islamic Studies
Clayman Institute for Gender Research

View the recording on the SASS Tube here.

In Queer Companions, Omar Kasmani theorizes saintly intimacy and the construction of queer social relations at Pakistan’s most important site of Sufi pilgrimage. Conjoining queer theory and the anthropology of Islam, Kasmani outlines the felt and enfleshed ways in which saintly affections bind individuals, society, and the state in Pakistan through a public architecture of intimacy. Islamic saints become lovers and queer companions just as a religious universe is made valuable to critical and queer forms of thinking. Focusing on the lives of ascetics known as fakirs in Pakistan, Kasmani shows how the affective bonds with the place’s patron saint, a thirteenth-century antinomian mystic, foster unstraight modes of living in the present. In a national context where religious shrines are entangled in the state’s infrastructures of governance, coming close to saints further entails a drawing near to more-than-official histories and public forms of affect. Through various fakir life stories, Kasmani contends that this intimacy offers a form of queer world making with saints. (Duke University Press)

Omar Kasmani, author of Queer Companions, will be in conversation with Anjali Arondekar (Professor, Feminist Studies; Co-Director, Center for South Asian Studies, UCSC) and Anna Bigelow (Associate Professor, Religious Studies; Faculty Director, Center for South Asia, Stanford University).

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