Symbols of Mystical Ecstasy and Divine Love in the Poetry of ’A’ishah al-Ba’uniyya and W.B. Yeats: A Heideggerian Re-interpretation | ||||
مجلة کلية الآداب جامعة الفيوم | ||||
Article 33, Volume 13, العدد 1 (اللغويات) - Serial Number 2, January 2021, Page 1832-1873 PDF (701.98 K) | ||||
Document Type: المقالة الأصلية | ||||
DOI: 10.21608/jfafu.2021.78386.1530 | ||||
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Author | ||||
جهان أنور ديب | ||||
October 6 University | ||||
Abstract | ||||
Ecstasy, though, is an inexpressible and condensed experience through which the Ultimate can be revealed, the mystic poet finds expression in resorting to symbolism to reflect the uniqueness of his/her spiritual experience and to communicate the unsaying. Approaching the divine essence and expressing the euphoria of His presence in meditation, recollection and self-forgetfulness are often described as provoking ecstatic trance-like states of intoxication, dancing, flying, or even death. Within a broad interest in comparative mystical literature, this study traces the creative merit and the mystical layers of significance behind the writings of the Arab Sufi ’A’ishah al-Ba’uniyya and the Irish poet, W.B. Yeats. It follows a synthesis model, mainly Heidegger’s existentialist view of ecstasy that envisages non-temporality presence, epiphany, transcendence and the experience of Being or Dasein, Jung’s concept of individuation, and the Sufi theory of Ibn Arabi and Ibn al-Farid. This paper investigates how both ‘Aishah and Yeats interpret their spiritual visions, though different in culture, religion and gender, in terms of a powerful and beautiful poetic endeavour? How does their mystical poetry reveal a blend of Western and Eastern thoughts though it is dominated by a single Sufi touch? It also investigates how spiritual dimensions, like transport, unveiling, illumination and beauty of the divine beloved, are exquisitely and metaphorically interconnected with physical love symbology⸺the wine, woman, roses, gyres, and shapes, in the process of elevating the erotic to the sanctity of the spiritual realm and integrating gender differences in the conscious quest for union with the Absolute. | ||||
Keywords | ||||
Symbolic poetry; al-Ba'uniyyah and Yeats; Heidegger's and the Ultimate Truth; mystical ecstasy and divine love; Jung's individuation | ||||
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