Scripture, Poetry, and the Making of a Community (Book report)

From Wikivahdat

The title is a book in the Quranic field, by Angelika Neuwirth and published by Oxford University Press in association with the Institute of Ismaili Studies as one of the Qur'anic Studies Series. The following is a report of the book.[1]

Overview

• Offers a new methodological approach to the study of the Qur'an

• Relocates the Qur'an within Late Antiquity

• Contextualises the Qur'an's heritage with both Biblical and Arab poetic heritage

Description

We are used to understanding the Qur'an as the 'Islamic text' par excellence, an assumption which, when viewed historically, is not evident at all. More than twenty years before it rose to the rank of Islamic Scripture, the Qur'an was an oral proclamation addressed by the Prophet Muhammad to pre-Islamic listeners, for the Muslim community had not yet been formed. We might best describe these listeners as individuals educated in late antique culture, be they Arab pagans familiar with the monotheistic religions of Judaism and Christianity or syncretists of these religions, or learned Jews and Christians whose presence is reflected in the Medinan suras. The interactive communication process between Muhammad and these groups brought about an epistemic turn in Arab Late Antiquity: with the Qur'anic discovery of writing as the ultimate authority, the nascent community attained a new 'textual coherence' where Scripture, with its valorisation of history and memory, was recognised as a guiding concept. It is within this new biblically imprinted world view that central principles and values of the pagan Arab milieu were debated. This process resulted in a twin achievement: the genesis of a new scripture and the emergence of a community. Two great traditions, then, the Biblical, transmitted by both Jews and Christians, and the local Arabic, represented in Ancient Arabic poetry, appear to have established the field of tension from which the Qur'an evolved; it is both Scripture and Poetry which have produced and shaped the new Muslim community.

Table of Contents

Foreword

Introduction

I: Frameworks

1:Not Eastern and not Western (lāsharqīyyatan wa-lāgharbīyyatan, Q. 24:35): Locating the Qur'an within the History of Scholarship

2:The Discovery of Writing in the Qur'an: Tracing an Epistemic Revolution in Late Antiquity

3:A Religious Transformation in Late Antiquity. From Tribal Genealogy to Divine Covenant: Qur'anic Refigurations of Pagan-Arab Ideals Based on Biblical Models

4:Glimpses of Paradise in the World and Lost Aspects of the World in the Hereafter: Two Qur'anic Re-readings of Biblical Psalms

II: The Liturgical Qur'an and the Emergence of the Community

5:Images and Metaphors in the Introductory Sections of the Early Meccan Suras

6:From Recitation through Liturgy to Canon: Notes on the Emergence of the Sura Composition and its Dissolution in the Course of the Development of Islamic Ritual

7:Referentiality and Textuality in Sūrat al-Hijr (Q. 15): Some Observations on the Qur anic Canonical Process and the Emergence of a Community

8:Sūrat al-Fātiha: Opening of the Textual Corpus of the Qur'an or Introit of the Prayer Service?

9:From the Sacred Mosque to the Remote Temple: Sūrat al-Isrā", between Text and Commentary

10:The Discovery of Evil in the Qur'an?: Revisiting Qur'anic Versions of the Decalogue in the Context of Pagan-Arab Late Antiquity

III: Narrative Figures between the Bible and the Qur'an

11:Crisis and Memory: The Qur'an's Path towards Canonisation as Reflected in its Anthropogonic Accounts

12:Narrative as a Canonical Process: The Story of Moses Seen through the Evolving History of the Qur'an

13:Imagining Mary, Disputing Jesus: Reading Sūrat Maryam and Related Meccan Texts within the Qur'anic Communication Process

14:Mary and Jesus: Counterbalancing the Biblical Patriarchs: A Re-reading of Sūrat Maryam in Sūrat Āl "Imrān (Q. 3:1 62)

15:Oral Scriptures in Contact: The Qur'anic Story of the Golden Calf and its Biblical Subtext between Narrative, Cult, and Inter-communal Debate

16:Myths and Legends in the Qur'an: An Itinerary through its Narrative Landscape

Author Information

Angelika Neuwirth, Professor of Arabic Studies, Freie Universität Berlin Angelika Neuwirth was educated in Classics and Oriental Studies at German and international universities (Italy, Iran and Israel). She has taught at the Universities of Munich, Amman, Bamberg, and Cairo, and has held the Chair of Arabic Studies at the Freie Universität Berlin since 1991. From 1994 to 1999 she served as the director of the Orient-Institut der Deutschen Morgenländischen Gesellschaft in Beirut and Istanbul. Her major fields of research are classical and modern Arabic literature and Arab Late Antiquity studies. In several recent publications, Professor Neuwirth has tried to vindicate the Qur'an as a Late Antique text, which—though deeply rooted in Arab culture—has contributed creatively to a number of major theological discourses. Professor Neuwirth has been acknowledged for her novel approach to interreligious studies by being bestowed several honorary doctorates, academy memberships and professional awards.

Reviews and Awards

"Neuwirth's rigorous close readings will enormously benefit not only scholars and teachers of the Qur'an and Arabic literature but also those committed to globalising the study of sacred texts as literary texts." - Mark LeTourneau, Journal of Religious History, Religious History Association

"As everyone who follows the scholarly study of the Qur'an in our times knows, Neuwirthâs work has been trendsetting. The publication of her very original studies in English is long overdue as the delay has prevented one of the most important voices in Qur'an scholarship today from being clearly heard in the English-speaking academic communities." - Sidney H. Griffith, Professor in the Department of Semitic and Egyptian Languages and Literatures, Catholic University of America

"Neuwirth's discussions of the canonization of the Qur'an and her analyses of specific suras are very significant, and the arguments and interpretations in the articles are intellectually impressive. A volume such as this will be of tremendous use not only to scholars of the Qur'an but to scholars in Biblical studies and religious studies generally." - Shawkat M. Toorawa, associate Professor of Arabic Literature and Islamic Studies, Cornell University

Notes