Mirabai's devotional love transcended patriarchal gender roles, using spiritual intimacy to claim autonomy and refuse arranged marriage.
In bhakti practice, the devotee adopts the feminine stance of lover toward the divine, regardless of biological gender. Mirabai embodied this radically: a high-caste widow who rejected remarriage and sang ecstatic love songs to Krishna, she used devotion as a framework to escape patriarchal control. Her tradition shows how spiritual love can dissolve rigid gender hierarchies when the heart's longing supersedes social law. For understanding gender across cultures, bhakti reveals that devotional intensity itself becomes a form of liberation—women and marginalized people reclaim agency by positioning themselves as active lovers of the divine rather than passive objects of worldly desire. This reframes gender not as fixed identity but as a dynamic relationship with the sacred.
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