Approaches to the Qur'an in Sub-Saharan Africa (Book report)

From Wikivahdat

The title is a book in the Quranic field Edited by Zulfikar Hirji and published by Oxford University Press as one of the Oxford Qur’anic Studies series. The following is a report of the book.[1]

Overview

• Covering a period from the eighteenth century to the early twenty-first century, the volume explores the diverse ways in which Muslims in sub-Saharan Africa engage with the Qur'an, Islam's most sacred scripture

• Features twelve case studies that examine Muslim engagements with the Qur'an in a variety of geographical locations including Burkina Faso, Kenya, Mali, Niger, Nigeria, Senegal, and Tanzania

• Explores how Muslims in these places engage with the Qur'an through a range of forms including spaces of education, music and poetry, textiles, prayer and manuscripts

• Includes contributions from leading scholars in the fields of art history, history, linguistics, and anthropology

Description

Covering a period from the eighteenth century to the early twenty-first century, this multidisciplinary volume examines Muslim engagements with the Qur'an in a variety of geographical locations in sub-Saharan Africa including Burkina Faso, Kenya, Mali, Niger, Nigeria, Senegal, and Tanzania. The volume's twelve case studies use different frameworks and methodological approaches from the academic disciplines of philology, historiography, anthropology, and art history. These studies explore a variety of media and modalities that Muslims in sub-Saharan Africa, as elsewhere, use in their engagements with the Qur'an. These include: manuscripts; commentaries; translations; recitations and invocations; music and poetry; magical squares and symbolic repertoire; medicinal and curative acts; textiles, ink, paper, and wooden boards; spaces of education, healing and prayer, as well as spaces of dreams and spirit worlds. As such, the case studies move well beyond the materiality of the Qur'an as a physical book to explore the ways in which the Qur'an is understood, felt and imagined, as well as the contestations and debates that arise from these diverse engagements.

Approaches to the Qur'an in Sub-Saharan Africa opens up new discourses about Islam and Muslims in sub-Saharan Africa through the examination of how Muslims in this geographical and socio-cultural context engage with the Qur'an, and about the Qur'an through an examination of how Muslims in sub-Saharan Africa engage with it. Thus, in seeking to understand the plurality of engagements that Muslims from diverse communities of interpretation and from different parts of sub-Saharan Africa have had with Qur'an, this innovative collection adds to the scholarship on the Qur'an as well as the scholarship on Islam and Muslims in Africa.

Table of Contents

Notes on Contributors

1:Introduction: Approaching the Qur'an in sub-Saharan Africa, Zulfikar Hirji

2:Tafsīr Sources in Four Annotated Qur'anic Manuscripts from Ancient Borno, Dmitry Bondarev

3:Qur'anic Exegesis in Manding: The Example of a Bamana Oral Commentary on Sūrat al-Raḥman (Q. 55), Tal Tamari

4:Polemics and Language in Swahili Translations of the Qur'an: Mubarak Ahmad (d. 2001), Abdullah Saleh al-Farsy (d. 1982) and Ali Muhsin al-Barwani (d. 2006), Farouk Topan

5:'A confirmation of what went before it': Historicising a Swahili Qur'an Translation, Gerard C. van de Bruinhorst

6:A Pious Poetics of Place: Islam and the Interpellation of (im)moral Subjects in Malian Popular Culture, Ryan Thomas Skinner

7:'And God will protect thee from mankind' (Q. 5:67): A Talismanic Shirt from West Africa, Ruba Kana'an

8:Prayer, Piety, and Pleasure: Contested Models of Islamic Worship in Niger, Adeline Masquelier

9:By way of the Qur'an: Appeasing Spirits, Easing Emotions and Everyday Matters in Zanzibar, Kjersti Larson

10:The Woman who Did Not Become Possessed: Tuareg Islam and the Problem of Gendered Knowledge and Power in a Visitational Dream, Susan J. Rasmussen

11:Women Who are Men: Daughters of Shaykh Ibrahim Ñas and the Paradoxes of Women's Religious Leadership in Senegal, Joseph Hill

12:From the Tablet to Paper Leaves: Islamic Metaphysics and the Symbolism of Traditional Qur'anic Education in Hausaland (Nigeria), Andrea Brigaglia

13:'The Siyu Qur'ans: Three Illuminated Qur'an Manuscripts from Coastal East Africa', Zulfikar Hirji

Author Information

Edited by Zulfikar Hirji, Associate Professor, York University

Zulfikar Hirji is Associate Professor at York University, Toronto. His research focuses on the diverse social and cultural expressions of Muslims in historical and contemporary contexts. He has conducted archival and field-based research in the Middle East, East Africa, South Asia, Europe, and North America. His publications include The Ismailis: An Illustrated History (2008), Diversity and Pluralism in Muslim Contexts (2010), Between Empires (2012), and Islam: An Illustrated Journey (2018).

Contributors:

Dmitry Bondarev, Andrea Brigaglia, Gerard C. van de Bruinhorst, Joseph Hill, Zulfikar Hirji, Ruba Kana'an, Kjersti Larson, Adeline Masquelier, Susan J. Rasmussen, Ryan Thomas Skinner, Tal Tamari, Farouk Topan

Notes