Francesco Piraino is Research Associate at the Center for the Study of World Religions at Harvard Divinity School and the director of the Centre for Comparative Studies of Civilizations and Spiritualities at the Giorgio Cini Foundation in Venice. Piraino is a sociologist of religion, culture, and art. He obtained his PhD in Sociology in 2016 at the Scuola Normale Superiore (Florence) and the École des Hautes Études en Sciences Sociales (Paris) and was a Marie Skłodowska-Curie Research Fellow at KU Leuven. Piraino works on spirituality, esotericism, mysticism, and the relationship between art and religion. He has recently published Le soufisme en Europe: islam, ésotérisme et new age (Karthala, 2023) and edited Religious Dimensions of Conspiracy Theories Comparing and Connecting Old and New Trends (with Marco Pasi and Egil Asprem, Routledge 2022).
Through closely observed case studies of four contemporary Sufi orders in Italy and France, Francesco Piraino reveals remarkable cross-fertilisations of ritual, doctrine and organisation. The resulting picture shows a lively Euro-Sufism shaped by the selective absorption of New Age and Western esoteric teachings no less than debates with secular humanists and Islamists. -- Nile Green, author of <i>Sufism: A Global History</i> A vital contribution to the growing field of Sufism in the Global North...The historical depth of this study, and the layered ways that Sufism is part of European religious, spiritual, and cultural history should not be underestimated as an important contribution. -- Merin Shobhana Xavier, Queen’s University * Nova Religio * This book is the result of a PhD project and additional postdoctoral research in Italy and France. It stands out as an innovative and extensive exploration of European Islam in the context of modernization and individualization. This vast volume is based on extensive fieldwork among four Sufi brotherhoods using the dynamic relation between Sufism as mysticism and Sufism as discursive tradition as the main heuristic tool. Thus, the book does not only offer a sharper view on Sufism than previous authors, but it also contributes to the study of the social organization of charisma and spiritual experience. Although readers with a primary interest in sociology may sometimes get distracted by the wealth of entertaining field notes the book contains and may wish for an explication of the systematic composition of the book, we consider Sufism in Europe a superb early career book. -- International Society for the Sociology of Religion