Gendered Spiritual Consciousness and Narrative Identity: A Comparative Study of Transformative Spirituality in Paulo Coelho’s ‘The Alchemist’ and Elif Shafak’s ‘The Forty Rules of Love’
Munazza Batool Tahir, Naveed Ahmad
Journal of Arts and Linguistics Studies December 8, 2025 Peer reviewed DOI: 10.71281/jals.v3i4.530 via OpenAlex
Summary
This paper compares how Paulo Coelho's 'The Alchemist' and Elif Shafak's 'The Forty Rules of Love' portray spiritual awakening through gendered narrative frameworks. Coelho's novel presents spirituality as a masculine external quest for destiny and cosmic purpose, while Shafak's work emphasizes a feminine spiritual consciousness rooted in emotional awakening, divine love, and relational experience. The analysis draws on narrative theory, gender studies, Sufi metaphysics, and literary hermeneutics to show how both texts construct spiritual identity through narrative structure and character development. The paper argues that spiritual consciousness develops through narrative self-making, where characters reinterpret their identities based on metaphysical experiences.
Study at a glance
| Design | theoretical or philosophical paper |
|---|---|
| Key finding | Spiritual consciousness in both novels develops through narrative self-making, where characters reinterpret their identities in light of metaphysical experiences, with Coelho using a masculine-coded paradigm of external quest and Shafak a feminine-coded paradigm of relational divine love. |
Abstract
This research paper examines the evolution of gendered spiritual consciousness and narrative identity in Paulo Coelho’s ‘The Alchemis’ and Elif Shafak’s ‘The Forty Rules of Love’. While both novels depict spirituality as a transformative journey, their narrative constructions differ significantly in tone, structure, and philosophical grounding. Coelho’s narrative presents spirituality through a masculine-coded paradigm of external quest, destiny, intuition, and cosmic purpose, whereas Shafak foregrounds a feminine-coded spiritual consciousness rooted in emotional awakening, divine love, and relational experience. Drawing from narrative theory, gender studies, Sufi metaphysics, symbolic semiotics, and literary hermeneutics, this paper analyzes how both texts construct spiritual identity through narrative structure, character development, symbolic encounters, and metaphysical reflection. The study argues that spiritual consciousness in both novels develops through narrative self-making, where characters reinterpret their identities in light of their metaphysical experiences. The paper contributes to comparative spirituality scholarship by highlighting how gendered narrative frameworks shape literary representations of spiritual awakening.