What this course gives you

A working command of the vocabulary of Islamic metaphysics — wujūd, māhiyya, the gradation of being — used precisely, not loosely.

The capacity to read primary texts of Ibn Sīnā and Mullā Ṣadrā with comprehension rather than reverence alone.

An understanding of why the tradition treats metaphysics as the science of realities — and what that claim asks of the knower.

Direct exchange with Professor Nasr in open Q&A after every session — the part no book can replace.

The eight weeks

A syllabus, not a playlist.

Download full syllabus

Description

This seminar will examine some of the most profound and influential writings about love from the Islamic intellectual and poetic traditions. Perhaps more than any other, the literary, philosophical, and spiritual traditions of Islam have been “love-centric.” In this course we will closely read and discuss various philosophies and theories of love from the mundane to the mystical. 

Texts:

William Chittick, Divine Love

Nizami, Layla and Majnun

Schedule of Meetings & Readings

May 7th 

Introduction

May 14th 

Love in Islamic Philosophy and Theology

May 21st 

The Sufi Story of Love

Poem:

May 28th 

Layla and Majnun

June 4th*

Rumi

Poems:

June 11th 

Ibn al-‘Arabī

Hany Ibrahim, “Ibn al-‘Arabi’s Metaphysics of Love”

Poems:

June 18th

Ḥāfiẓ

Ghazals:

The troubador of love

 Ghazal, "Last night I saw the angels....

, Lover's Anthem

 I said, "I suffer for you,"

Three Ghazals

Ghazal 1

“For years I pawned my book for wine,”

“For the world’s boundless suffering”

June 25th 

Love of the Prophet

Ogunnaike, Poetry in Praise of Prophetic Perfection, 1-74.

Hassān ibn Thābit:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vcYFBTw2Sdc

Sa‘dī:

https://archive.blogs.harvard.edu/sulaymanibnqiddees/2015/12/23/for-the-mawlid/

Al-Buṣīrī, Qaṣīdat al-Burda:

https://www.qasidaburda.com/

“How long have I complained of my love for you?”

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EvIym-UWzsM

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DLJZcg2k_L0

Muhammad al-Majdhūb:

https://archive.blogs.harvard.edu/sulaymanibnqiddees/2020/11/17/mawlid-2020-mu%e1%b8%a5ammad-majdhubs-praise/

Ibrahim Niasse:

“Poem of the One Who Lost His Mind”

Ogunnaike, Layla Left (recording)

Amir Sulaiman: “The Lover, The Love, and The Beloved”

Your instructor
Oludamini Ogunnaike

Associate Professor of African religious thought and democracy at the University of Virginia.