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The Qu’rān through the Lens of Late Antiquity, Late Antiquity through the Lens of the Qu’rān: Approaches, Perspectives and Possibilities

Grasso, Valentina A.

The Harvard theological review, 2022-07, Vol.115 (3), p.466-476 [Periódico revisado por pares]

New York, USA: Cambridge University Press

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  • Título:
    The Qu’rān through the Lens of Late Antiquity, Late Antiquity through the Lens of the Qu’rān: Approaches, Perspectives and Possibilities
  • Autor: Grasso, Valentina A.
  • Assuntos: Amir-Moezzi, Mohammad ; Antiquity ; Archaeology ; Christianity ; Civilization, Classical ; Civilization, Greco-Roman ; Classical civilization ; Criticism and interpretation ; Dye, Guillaume ; Editors ; Islam ; Islamic law ; Islamic studies ; Jewish people ; Muslims ; Paleography ; Quran ; Religion ; Religious aspects ; Religious scholars ; Review Essay ; Semitic languages ; Zoroastrianism
  • É parte de: The Harvard theological review, 2022-07, Vol.115 (3), p.466-476
  • Descrição: [...]the third volume (sold separately) contains a bibliography of studies on the Qur’ān from the nineteenth century until today. According to the endorsements on the back cover of the boxed set of volumes 1 and 2a and b, reading Le Coran des historiens is: “an unprecedented adventure of the mind. Like Azarnouche, Jullien has no previous publications on the Qur’ān but has produced valuable contributions on the study of ancient Iran.11 Guillaume Dye, one of the editors, and Manfred Kropp, a prominent historian specializing in Semitic studies who is based at the Johannes Gutenberg-Universität Mainz, Germany, survey Ethiopian Christianity.12 Following Jan M. F. Van Reeth’s (Université d’Anvers, Belgium) essay “ ‘Judeo-Christian’ Currents and Eastern Christians of Late Antiquity,”13 Michel Tardieu, one of the world’s leading experts on late antique religions (Collège de France), offers an overview of Manichaeism.14 The final chapters feature David Hamidović’s (Université de Lausanne, Switzerland) contribution to the relationship between Jewish Apocrypha and the Qur’ān,15 followed by Muriel Debié’s essay on Syriac apocalypses (drawing from her previous co-authored book on the topic)16 and Frantz Grenet’s on Iranian apocalyptic. [...]David S. Powers (Cornell University, USA), founding editor of the journal Islamic Law and Society, closes the section with an essay on the legal environment of the Qur’ān.19 The third and last part, “The Qur’ānic Corpus,” opens with an essay by François Déroche, a renowned specialist of Islamic codicology and paleography, based at the Collège de France, who writes on the study of qur’ānic manuscripts in the West.20 Éléonore Cellard (also at the Collège de France) presents the oldest qur’ānic manuscripts,21 while Frédéric Imbert (Aix-Marseille Université, France) explores the epigraphic Qur’ān.22 The two editors write the last three contributions. [...]the volume does not “synthesize our knowledge.”
  • Editor: New York, USA: Cambridge University Press
  • Idioma: Inglês

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