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University of California Press

About the Book

Dreams that Matter explores the social and material life of dreams in contemporary Cairo. Amira Mittermaier guides the reader through landscapes of the imagination that feature Muslim dream interpreters who draw on Freud, reformists who dismiss all forms of divination as superstition, a Sufi devotional group that keeps a diary of dreams related to its shaykh, and ordinary believers who speak of moving encounters with the Prophet Muhammad. In close dialogue with her Egyptian interlocutors, Islamic textual traditions, and Western theorists, Mittermaier teases out the dream’s ethical, political, and religious implications. Her book is a provocative examination of how present-day Muslims encounter and engage the Divine that offers a different perspective on the Islamic Revival. Dreams That Matter opens up new spaces for an anthropology of the imagination, inviting us to rethink both the imagined and the real.

About the Author

Amira Mittermaier is Associate Professor of Religion at the University of Toronto.

Table of Contents

List of Illustrations
Acknowledgments
On Transliterations and Translations
Prelude

Introduction: Studying Dreams in Undreamy Times

1. Dream Trouble
2. Thresholds of Interpretation
3. Seeing the (In)visible
4. Poetry and Prophecy
5. The Ethics of the Visitational Dream
6. The Royal Road into the Unknown
7. Virtual Realities, Visionary Realities

Afterword: On the Politics of Dreaming

Notes
Glossary
Bibliography
Index

Reviews

“Engaging, theoretically sophisticated and ethnographically rich. . . . Anyone interested in dreams, visions, psychoanalysis, the imagination Islam, religion or media(tion) will find this to be a welcome and refreshing addition to scholarship in these areas.”
Social Anthropology
“[This] exploration of Egyptian dream life is a unique, if not compelling, one.”
Bidoun
"This brilliant study presents contemporary anthropology at its best. Whether one's goal is understanding the permeability of traditions and modernities or the changing shape of religious imagination and thought in one of the most pivotal countries of the Middle East, this book is an outstanding point of departure."—Dale F. Eickelman, author of The Middle East and Central Asia: An Anthropological Approach, 4th ed.

"Dreams That Matter is an insightful and well-crafted study of the practice of dreaming in contemporary Egypt. Mittermaier provides a superb analysis of the imaginative repertoires of Islamic traditions and shows how the dream has remained not only a site of Muslim scholarly interest, but an important part of the way ordinary Muslims encounter and engage with the divine."—Charles Hirschkind, author of Powers of the Secular Modern: Talal Asad and His Interlocutors

"Amira Mittermaier has given us the most complete anthropological study of dream culture in the Middle East—perhaps in any culture. It is a sensitive, intellectually challenging, indeed a courageous, investigation of the psychological, ontological, and ethical assumptions that lie behind dreams, visions, and dream-visitations in contemporary Egypt—where the dream is a vibrant site of political, religious, and interpretive contest. Dreams That Matter will rank among the most important contributions to the anthropology of the imagination for years to come."—Vincent Crapanzano, author of The Harkis: The Wound That Never Heals

Awards

  • Awards for Excellence in the Analytical-Descriptive Studies category 2011, American Academy of Religion
  • Clifford Geertz Prize in the Anthropology of Religion 2011, American Anthropological Association
  • Chicago Folklore Prize 2011, American Folklore Society
  • Second Place for the Victor Turner Prize in Ethnographic Writing 2011, Society for Humanistic Anthropology