AN INDEPENDENT BEST BOOKS ON RELIGION 2014 PICK Few things provoke controversy in the modern world like the religion brought by Prophet Muhammad. Modern media are replete with alarm over jihad, underage marriage and the threat of amputation or stoning under Shariah law. Sometimes rumor, sometimes based on fact and often misunderstood, the tenets of Islamic law and dogma were not set in the religion’s founding moments. They were developed, like in other world religions, over centuries by the clerical class of Muslim scholars. Misquoting Muhammad takes the reader back in time through Islamic civilization and traces how and why such controversies developed, offering an inside view into how key and controversial aspects of Islam took shape. From the protests of the Arab Spring to Istanbul at the fall of the Ottoman Empire, and from the ochre red walls of Delhi’s great mosques to the trade routes of the Indian Ocean world, Misquoting Muhammad lays out how Muslim intellectuals have sought to balance reason and revelation, weigh science and religion, and negotiate the eternal truths of scripture amid shifting values.
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A much needed and timely work on the contentious issues of Islamic thought in the modern world
List of Illustrations Foreword Preface Acknowledgments Notes on dates, transliteration, abbreviations and citations   1  The Problem(s) with Islam      A world full of God      Taking Islamic scripture and its interpreters seriously   2  A Map of the Islamic Interpretive Tradition      The word of God, the teachings of His Prophet and the mind of man      Obey God and obey His Messenger      The beginnings of the Islamic interpretive tradition      Abu Hanifa and the Partisans of Reason      Malik and the authority of custom      The power of reason: the Greek legacy and Islamic theology      Shafi‘i and the beginnings of Sunni Islam      The collection and criticism of Hadiths      Putting reason in its place in Sunni theology and law      The great convergence of Sunni Islam      Legal theory and its discontents      Sufism and inspiration from God      The iconoclasts and Islamic revival      Twilight of an era   3  The Fragile Truth of Scripture      A crisis of confidence      Canons and reading scripture with charity      The turning over of an era      Reading scripture so it’s true      The Islamic science of epistemology and interpretation (Usul al-Fiqh)      The language of God and the rhetoric of His Prophet      The Qur’an: valid for all times and places      Hadiths and interpreting the life of the Prophet      Changing times and the reasons behind scriptural law      The interaction of the Qur’an and Hadiths in time      Into the weeds: the case of raising one’s hands in prayer      The summer of the liberal age   4  Clinging to the Canon in a Ruptured World      Upstarts at the end of time      The treason of interpretation      Heresy acceptable: ruptures in canonical communities      Slay the unbelievers wherever you find them: jihad and (re)interpreting scripture      Women cannot lead: historicizing scripture versus God’s inscrutable law      Sex with little girls: interpreting scripture amid changing norms      The ulama, the state and Shariah authenticity without scripture      The court must not be political – morality and truth in a ruptured world   5  Muslim Martin Luthers and the Paradox of Tradition      The paradox of interpretive control      The rule of interpretation in the conflict between Sunni and Shiite Islam      Tradition as governor, scripture as subject      Killing one’s children: tradition betraying scripture      Reconsidering the penalty for apostasy: tradition redeeming scripture      Women leading prayer: should scripture trump tradition?      The ‘Qur’an Only’ movement      No escaping tradition      The price of reformation      The guide of tradition: a necessary but thankless job   6  Lying about the Prophet of God      The truth, what’s that?      Noble Lies and profound truths      The ulama as guardians      Appealing to the flesh: using unreliable Hadiths in Sunni Islam      A familiar habit: assisting truth in Western scripture and historiography      Seventy-two virgins: pragmatic truth and the heavenly reward of martyrs      The cost of Noble Lying      Muslim objections to the Noble Lie      Genre versus book: reviving an old approach to authenticating Hadiths      The dangers of Noble Lying for Muslims today      Pragmatic truth and the beauty of Noble Lying   7  When Scripture Can’t Be True      The Qur’an and domestic violence      Who decides what God means?      Courts have the final word      Saying ‘no’ to the text and the hermeneutics of suspicion   Appendix I: Marracci and Ockley on Aisha’s Marriage to the Prophet Appendix II: Hadiths on a Parent Killing His Child      Ratings of the Hadith by Muslim critics      Examination of individual narrations      My evaluation of the Hadith      Citations for Hadith of a Father Killing His Child Appendix III: The Hadith of riba and Incest      Ratings by Hadith critics      My evaluation of the Hadith of Riba and Incest      Citations for the Hadith Appendix IV: The Hadith of the Seventy-Two Virgins      Overall rating      Citations for the Hadith of the Seventy-Two Virgins   Notes Select Bibliography Index
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‘Lucid, learned and engaging’ 

Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9781780747828
Publisert
2015-08-06
Utgiver
Vendor
Oneworld Publications
Høyde
198 mm
Bredde
129 mm
Dybde
28 mm
Aldersnivå
G, 01
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet
Antall sider
384

Biographical note

Jonathan A.C. Brown is Professor and Alwaleed bin Talal Chair of Islamic Civilization in the School of Foreign Service at Georgetown University. He is the author of Slavery & Islam, Misquoting Muhammad and Hadith: Muhammad’s Legacy in the Medieval and Modern World.