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Remapping Emergent Islam: Texts, Social Settings, and Ideological Trajectories [Kõva köide]

Edited by (Saint Louis University, Madrid Campus, Spain)
This multidisciplinary collective volume advances the scholarly discussion on the origins of Islam. It simultaneously focuses on three domains: texts, social contexts, and ideological developments relevant for the study Islam's beginnings - taking the latter expression in its broadest possible sense. The intersections of these domains need to be examined afresh in order to obtain a clear picture of the concurrent phenomena that collectively enabled both the gradual emergence of a new religious identity and also the progressive delimitation of its initially fuzzy boundaries.

Arvustused

Cet ouvrage a le mérite de proposer des réflexions stimulantes et d'ouvrir des débats originaux et novateurs pour les études sur le Coran et les débuts de l'islam, contribution fort appréciable, dans un domaine où de nombreux travaux, loin d'ouvrir des perspectives nouvelles, ont plutôt tendance à fermer dogmatiquement des portes.- Guillaume Dye, Université libre de Bruxelles (ULB), Bulletin critique des Annales islamologiques, No. 36 (2022)

Introduction 7(8)
Carlos A. Segovia
Part 1 Re-Assessing the Hypothesis of a Peripheral Jewish Background
1 South Arabian `Judaism', Himyarite Rahmanism, and the Origins of Islam
15(30)
Aaron W. Hughes
2 Early Islam as a Messianic Movement: A Non-Issue?
45(40)
Jose Costa
Part 2 An Encrypted Manichaean / Messalian Matrix?
3 The Astral Messenger, The Lunar Revelation, The Solar Salvation: Dualist Cosmic Soteriology in The Early Qur'an
85(26)
Daniel A. Beck
4 Messalianism, Binitarianism, and the East-Syrian Background of the Qur'an
111(20)
Carlos A. Segovia
Part 3 Measuring the World's Timeline... and Imagining the Afterlife at the Persian Court?
5 The Jewish and Christian Background of the Earliest Islamic Liturgical Calendar
131(18)
Basil Lourie
6 The Persian Keys of the Quranic Paradise
149(28)
Gilles Courtieu
Part 4 Conceptual Quicksand, Meta-Narratives of Identity, Texts and their Marginalia
7 Divine Attributes of All in Shi'ite Mysticism: New Remarks on `Heresy' in Early Islam
177(26)
Mohammad Ali Amir-Moezzi
8 Echoes of Pseudepigrapha in the Qur'an
203(18)
Tommaso Tesei
9 What Do We Mean by THE Qur'an: On Origins, Fragments, and Inter-Narrative Identity
221
Emdio Gonzalez Ferrin
Carlos A. Segovia is Lecturer in Quranic and Religious Studies at Saint Louis University-Madrid and founding Co-Director of the Early Islamic Studies Seminar: International Scholarship on the Quran and Islamic Origins.