Books by Lilith Mahmud

"From Amazon.com:
"From its traces in cryptic images on the dollar bill to Dan Brown’s The Lost... more "From Amazon.com:
"From its traces in cryptic images on the dollar bill to Dan Brown’s The Lost Symbol, Freemasonry has long been one of the most romanticized secret societies in the world. But a simple fact escapes most depictions of this elite brotherhood: There are women Freemasons, too. In this groundbreaking ethnography, Lilith Mahmud takes readers inside Masonic lodges in contemporary Italy, where she observes the many ritualistic and fraternal bonds forged among women initiates of this elite and esoteric society.
Offering a tantalizing look behind lodge doors, The Brotherhood of Freemason Sisters unveils a complex culture of discretion in which Freemasons simultaneously reveal some truths and hide others. Women—one of Freemasonry’s best-kept secrets—are often upper class and highly educated but paradoxically antifeminist, and their self-cultivation through the Masonic path is an effort to embrace the deeply gendered ideals of fraternity. Mahmud unravels this contradiction at the heart of Freemasonry: how it was at once responsible for many of the egalitarian concepts of the Enlightenment and yet has always been, and in Italy still remains, extremely exclusive. The result is not only a thrilling look at an unfamiliar—and surprisingly influential—world, but a reevaluation altogether of the modern values and ideals that we now take for granted."
REVIEWS:
“A riveting analysis of the women Freemasons in Italy that illuminates the debates about and paradoxes of women’s inclusion into a controversial secret ‘brotherhood.’ Mahmud initiates us with wisdom into the contradictions of a liberal political philosophy that extols universal brotherhood but is embedded in exclusionary practices of community and ritual based on class, race, and gender. This feminist ethnography is sure to become a classic in the anthropology of Europe.”
(Lila Abu-Lughod, author of Do Muslim Women Need Saving?)
“Beautifully written and staged, Mahmud’s is an extraordinary work of thinking through fieldwork materials and experiences. Self-disclosing as having produced ‘profane ethnography,’ and by finding fraternity with women Freemasons, who were not thought to exist, she advances fresh insights across the range of topics and issues that have engaged anthropologists, and intellectuals generally, about the present morphings of liberal humanism, from within one of its most politically conservative expressions.”
(George E. Marcus, author of Ethnography through Thick and Thin)
“Mahmud’s analysis of masculinities and femininities in Freemason societies in Italy reveals brilliantly the power and practices of elite fraternities in contemporary Europe. The book demonstrates how and why feminist ethnographic research can both engage with the micropractices of gender and community making and shed light on larger issues about the role of transparency and secrecy, liberalism and humanism, in making ‘Western’ democracies. This is anthropology at its best: reflexive, engaged, curious, and careful.”
(Inderpal Grewal, author of Transnational America)
“Mahmud has crafted a stupendous ethnography of female Freemasonry in Italy. Her writing, sensuously descriptive at one moment and coolly analytical at the next, frames a sophisticated, counterintuitive, but radically persuasive analysis of a modernity that has silenced women even when its self-proclaimed humanism has conditionally included them; ‘female brothers’ were as thoroughly excluded from state persecution as they have been belittled by their sometimes well-meaning but condescending male counterparts. Carrying feminist analysis into a resolutely antifeminist female domain to expose the self-satisfaction of liberal European humanism, Mahmud’s incisive critique does not preclude affection or respect for its targets. Indeed, her sometimes puzzled affection for her highly conservative subjects is one of the book’s many attractive strengths, as is the paradoxically revelatory discretion that she, as a talented ethnographer, shared with them. This rare synergy of style, scholarship, and ethical sensibility is a tribute to anthropology’s relevance for understanding the paradoxes of modernity.”
(Michael Herzfeld, author of Evicted from Eternity) "
Papers by Lilith Mahmud
Annual Review of Anthropology, 2021
Although early feminist insights about reflexivity and fieldwork relations have become core tenet... more Although early feminist insights about reflexivity and fieldwork relations have become core tenets of anthropological theories, feminism itself has been marginalized in anthropology. This review examines feminist contributions to American cultural anthropology since the 1990s across four areas of scholarship: the anthropology of science and medicine, political anthropology, economic anthropology, and ethnography as writing and genre. Treating feminist anthropology as a traveling theory capable of addressing critical social problems beyond gender, this article aims not merely to recredit feminism in anthropology, but also to show its potential to transform anthropology into an antiracist, decolonial, and abolitionist project.
In Organisational Anthropology. Garsten, Christina, and Anette Nyqvist, eds. London: Pluto Press., May 2013

Anthropological Quarterly, Nov 2012
In 1993 Italian newspapers published the membership lists of all major Masonic Orders in the coun... more In 1993 Italian newspapers published the membership lists of all major Masonic Orders in the country. The lists were part of an ongoing campaign waged in the name of transparency against the secrecy of Freemasons, long suspected of political conspiracies. The lists, however, omitted women's names, thus reifying Freemasonry as a brotherhood of men. Drawing on 18 months of fieldwork among Freemason men and women in Italy, I examine historically and ethnographically the significance of women's absence from the lists, the aftermath of those publications for Masonic experiences in Italy, and the paradoxes of transparency as a gendered discourse. [Citizens have the right to form associations freely and without authorization for those ends that are not forbidden by criminal law. Secret associations and associations that, even indirectly, pursue political aims by means of organisations having a military character shall be forbidden.
American Ethnologist, May 2012
Interviews by Lilith Mahmud
Reviews of The Brotherhood of Freemason Sisters by Lilith Mahmud

La partecipazione attiva ai lavori di loggia e l'adesione, non solo ideale, ai principi e alle pr... more La partecipazione attiva ai lavori di loggia e l'adesione, non solo ideale, ai principi e alle pratiche di perfezione morale da parte femminile costituisce ancor oggi uno dei motivi di maggior divisione all'interno del variegato mondo massonico internazionale, lo spartiacque ideologico -e dunque di riflesso anche rituale -probabilmente più netto ed evidente lungo il quale si esplica la divisione, in alcuni casi la netta contrapposizione, tra obbedienze e tradizioni rituali. Se da una parte la partecipazione femminile ai lavori rituali viene rigettata in quanto elemento di irreversibile rottura nei confronti del dettato andersoniano -fonte e al contempo paradigma di ogni "regolarità" massonica -che inquadra il massone nelle coordinate di una mascolinità socialmente libera, politicamente non condizionata e moralmente non dubbia (… Members of a Lodge must be good and true Men [enfasi mia], free-born, and of mature and discreet Age, no Bondmen no Women, no immoral or scandalous men …, James
Book reviews 236 LILITH MAHMUD, The brotherhood of Freemason sisters: gender, secrecy and fratern... more Book reviews 236 LILITH MAHMUD, The brotherhood of Freemason sisters: gender, secrecy and fraternity in Italian Masonic lodges, Chicago: The University of Chicago Press, 2014, xii, 249 pp.
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Books by Lilith Mahmud
"From its traces in cryptic images on the dollar bill to Dan Brown’s The Lost Symbol, Freemasonry has long been one of the most romanticized secret societies in the world. But a simple fact escapes most depictions of this elite brotherhood: There are women Freemasons, too. In this groundbreaking ethnography, Lilith Mahmud takes readers inside Masonic lodges in contemporary Italy, where she observes the many ritualistic and fraternal bonds forged among women initiates of this elite and esoteric society.
Offering a tantalizing look behind lodge doors, The Brotherhood of Freemason Sisters unveils a complex culture of discretion in which Freemasons simultaneously reveal some truths and hide others. Women—one of Freemasonry’s best-kept secrets—are often upper class and highly educated but paradoxically antifeminist, and their self-cultivation through the Masonic path is an effort to embrace the deeply gendered ideals of fraternity. Mahmud unravels this contradiction at the heart of Freemasonry: how it was at once responsible for many of the egalitarian concepts of the Enlightenment and yet has always been, and in Italy still remains, extremely exclusive. The result is not only a thrilling look at an unfamiliar—and surprisingly influential—world, but a reevaluation altogether of the modern values and ideals that we now take for granted."
REVIEWS:
“A riveting analysis of the women Freemasons in Italy that illuminates the debates about and paradoxes of women’s inclusion into a controversial secret ‘brotherhood.’ Mahmud initiates us with wisdom into the contradictions of a liberal political philosophy that extols universal brotherhood but is embedded in exclusionary practices of community and ritual based on class, race, and gender. This feminist ethnography is sure to become a classic in the anthropology of Europe.”
(Lila Abu-Lughod, author of Do Muslim Women Need Saving?)
“Beautifully written and staged, Mahmud’s is an extraordinary work of thinking through fieldwork materials and experiences. Self-disclosing as having produced ‘profane ethnography,’ and by finding fraternity with women Freemasons, who were not thought to exist, she advances fresh insights across the range of topics and issues that have engaged anthropologists, and intellectuals generally, about the present morphings of liberal humanism, from within one of its most politically conservative expressions.”
(George E. Marcus, author of Ethnography through Thick and Thin)
“Mahmud’s analysis of masculinities and femininities in Freemason societies in Italy reveals brilliantly the power and practices of elite fraternities in contemporary Europe. The book demonstrates how and why feminist ethnographic research can both engage with the micropractices of gender and community making and shed light on larger issues about the role of transparency and secrecy, liberalism and humanism, in making ‘Western’ democracies. This is anthropology at its best: reflexive, engaged, curious, and careful.”
(Inderpal Grewal, author of Transnational America)
“Mahmud has crafted a stupendous ethnography of female Freemasonry in Italy. Her writing, sensuously descriptive at one moment and coolly analytical at the next, frames a sophisticated, counterintuitive, but radically persuasive analysis of a modernity that has silenced women even when its self-proclaimed humanism has conditionally included them; ‘female brothers’ were as thoroughly excluded from state persecution as they have been belittled by their sometimes well-meaning but condescending male counterparts. Carrying feminist analysis into a resolutely antifeminist female domain to expose the self-satisfaction of liberal European humanism, Mahmud’s incisive critique does not preclude affection or respect for its targets. Indeed, her sometimes puzzled affection for her highly conservative subjects is one of the book’s many attractive strengths, as is the paradoxically revelatory discretion that she, as a talented ethnographer, shared with them. This rare synergy of style, scholarship, and ethical sensibility is a tribute to anthropology’s relevance for understanding the paradoxes of modernity.”
(Michael Herzfeld, author of Evicted from Eternity) "
Papers by Lilith Mahmud
Interviews by Lilith Mahmud
Reviews of The Brotherhood of Freemason Sisters by Lilith Mahmud
"From its traces in cryptic images on the dollar bill to Dan Brown’s The Lost Symbol, Freemasonry has long been one of the most romanticized secret societies in the world. But a simple fact escapes most depictions of this elite brotherhood: There are women Freemasons, too. In this groundbreaking ethnography, Lilith Mahmud takes readers inside Masonic lodges in contemporary Italy, where she observes the many ritualistic and fraternal bonds forged among women initiates of this elite and esoteric society.
Offering a tantalizing look behind lodge doors, The Brotherhood of Freemason Sisters unveils a complex culture of discretion in which Freemasons simultaneously reveal some truths and hide others. Women—one of Freemasonry’s best-kept secrets—are often upper class and highly educated but paradoxically antifeminist, and their self-cultivation through the Masonic path is an effort to embrace the deeply gendered ideals of fraternity. Mahmud unravels this contradiction at the heart of Freemasonry: how it was at once responsible for many of the egalitarian concepts of the Enlightenment and yet has always been, and in Italy still remains, extremely exclusive. The result is not only a thrilling look at an unfamiliar—and surprisingly influential—world, but a reevaluation altogether of the modern values and ideals that we now take for granted."
REVIEWS:
“A riveting analysis of the women Freemasons in Italy that illuminates the debates about and paradoxes of women’s inclusion into a controversial secret ‘brotherhood.’ Mahmud initiates us with wisdom into the contradictions of a liberal political philosophy that extols universal brotherhood but is embedded in exclusionary practices of community and ritual based on class, race, and gender. This feminist ethnography is sure to become a classic in the anthropology of Europe.”
(Lila Abu-Lughod, author of Do Muslim Women Need Saving?)
“Beautifully written and staged, Mahmud’s is an extraordinary work of thinking through fieldwork materials and experiences. Self-disclosing as having produced ‘profane ethnography,’ and by finding fraternity with women Freemasons, who were not thought to exist, she advances fresh insights across the range of topics and issues that have engaged anthropologists, and intellectuals generally, about the present morphings of liberal humanism, from within one of its most politically conservative expressions.”
(George E. Marcus, author of Ethnography through Thick and Thin)
“Mahmud’s analysis of masculinities and femininities in Freemason societies in Italy reveals brilliantly the power and practices of elite fraternities in contemporary Europe. The book demonstrates how and why feminist ethnographic research can both engage with the micropractices of gender and community making and shed light on larger issues about the role of transparency and secrecy, liberalism and humanism, in making ‘Western’ democracies. This is anthropology at its best: reflexive, engaged, curious, and careful.”
(Inderpal Grewal, author of Transnational America)
“Mahmud has crafted a stupendous ethnography of female Freemasonry in Italy. Her writing, sensuously descriptive at one moment and coolly analytical at the next, frames a sophisticated, counterintuitive, but radically persuasive analysis of a modernity that has silenced women even when its self-proclaimed humanism has conditionally included them; ‘female brothers’ were as thoroughly excluded from state persecution as they have been belittled by their sometimes well-meaning but condescending male counterparts. Carrying feminist analysis into a resolutely antifeminist female domain to expose the self-satisfaction of liberal European humanism, Mahmud’s incisive critique does not preclude affection or respect for its targets. Indeed, her sometimes puzzled affection for her highly conservative subjects is one of the book’s many attractive strengths, as is the paradoxically revelatory discretion that she, as a talented ethnographer, shared with them. This rare synergy of style, scholarship, and ethical sensibility is a tribute to anthropology’s relevance for understanding the paradoxes of modernity.”
(Michael Herzfeld, author of Evicted from Eternity) "