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Nick Posegay deposited Men of Letters in the Syriac Scribal Tradition: Dawid bar Pawlos, Rabban Rāmišoʿ, and the Family of Beṯ Rabban in the group
Islamicate Studies on Humanities Commons 4 years, 10 months agoDawid bar Pawlos’ Letter on Dots is an eighth-century text that purportedly describes the introduction of some of the dots used in Syriac writing. It also sheds light on the life of a certain Rāmišoʿ of Beṯ Rabban, apparently the same man as the master of pointing named in MS BL Add. 12138. However, most studies of Syriac dots either neglec…[Read more]
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Nick Posegay deposited ‘An Arabic Qurʾān, That You Might Understand’: Qurʾān Fragments in the T-S Arabic Cairo Genizah Collection in the group
Islamicate Studies on Humanities Commons 4 years, 10 months agoThe Arabic-script Qurʾān fragments of the Cairo genizah collections have not yet drawn much interest among Arabic and genizah scholars. This paper aims to bring them to the attention of a broader audience by presenting the palaeographic features (§3) and vocalisation systems (§4) of eleven Arabic-script Qurʾān fragments from the Cambridge Unive…[Read more]
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Nick Posegay deposited Connecting the Dots: The Shared Phonological Tradition in Syriac, Arabic, and Hebrew Vocalisation in the group
Islamicate Studies on Humanities Commons 4 years, 10 months agoThis article presents new data on links between the various medieval vocalisation traditions of Hebrew, Syriac, and Arabic. These include the identification of overlaps in the Aramaic terminology used by Jewish Masoretes and Syriac Christian grammarians and in the phonological theories that underlie them, as well as connections between Syriac and…[Read more]
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Muhammad Akram deposited ہندومت پراردو میں علمی مواد: ایک موضوعاتی کتابیات/Academic Materials on Hinduism in Urdu: A Thematic Bibliography in the group
Islamicate Studies on Humanities Commons 4 years, 10 months agoThree types of academic sources are crucial for understanding the Hindu tradition in our times: a) scriptures and the classical texts that are available mostly in Sanskrit b) works in the English language produced by orientalists, religious studies scholars, and some modern Hindu religious leaders themselves, and c) writings of…[Read more]
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Muhammad Akram deposited Adaptation and Validation of the New Indices of Religious Orientation Revised Scale in the group
Islamicate Studies on Humanities Commons 4 years, 10 months agoObjective. The purpose of this study was to adapt and validate the New Indices of Religious Orientation Revised (NIROR) scale, which has been developed in different cultural settings, for a study of Pakistani university students. The NIROR was developed by Francis, Fawcett, Robbins, and Stairs (2016), consisting of 27 items for Canadian-Christian…[Read more]
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Muhammad Akram deposited مسلمانوں کے مطالعہ مذاہب پر مغربی مفکرین کے تاثرات: یاک وارڈن برگ کے خصوصی حوالے سے ایک تنقیدی جائزہ /Western Views of the Muslim Study of Religions: A Critical Overview with Special Reference to Jacques Waardenburg in the group
Islamicate Studies on Humanities Commons 4 years, 10 months agoMuslim study of religions before modern times has claimed the attention of some modern Western scholars. At least three developmental phases of this nascent discursive field are discernable. Firstly, Western views of Muslim writings on different religions started appearing as prefaces, marginal notes, and introductions to the edited manuscripts…[Read more]
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Muhammad Akram deposited مسلم مطالعۂ مذاہب پیٹریس بروڈئر کی نگاہ میں: ایک تنقیدی جائزہ /Patrice C. Brodeur on the Muslim Study of Religions: An Appraisal in the group
Islamicate Studies on Humanities Commons 4 years, 10 months agoThe Muslim study of religions has claimed the attention of some modern Western scholars. Patrice C. Brodeur, a scholar of religious studies, based at the University of Montreal, is one of them. He delves into the historical realities and epistemological developments that shaped the Muslim study of other religions in the past as well as in…[Read more]
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Muhammad Akram deposited Emergence of the Modern Academic Study of Religion: An Analytical Survey of Various Interpretations in the group
Islamicate Studies on Humanities Commons 4 years, 10 months agoThis paper discusses various interpretations about the emergence of the academic study of religion in the modern world. It is viewed that the expansion of Europe and resultant engagement of European consciousness with religious and cultural otherness played a role. Internally, the Enlightenment movement had prepared the ground for a critical and…[Read more]
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Muhammad Akram deposited God-Realisation through Multiple Religions? A Study into Religious Experiences of Sri Ramakrishna in the group
Islamicate Studies on Humanities Commons 4 years, 10 months agoSri Ramakrishna (1836–1886) is an important Hindu spiritual personality from nineteenth-century Bengal who is best known for his pluralistic approach to religions, which is based on his claim to have practically experienced the same divine reality through various strands of Hinduism and different religions of the world. This paper pertains to an a…[Read more]
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Muhammad Akram deposited Internationalisation of the Study of Religion and Its Methodological Challenges in the group
Islamicate Studies on Humanities Commons 4 years, 10 months agoThis paper discusses internationalisation of the study of religion after the mid-twentieth century and some methodological implications of this development. It is shown that when the International Association for the History of Religions (IAHR) was established in 1950 under the auspices of UNESCO to collaborate between scholars from different…[Read more]
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Muhammad Akram deposited Christian-Muslim Coexistence in Peshawar City in the group
Islamicate Studies on Humanities Commons 4 years, 10 months agoSeveral scholarly works and media reports claim that the Christian minority in Pakistan is mistreated, persecuted, and discriminated against, giving an overall impression as if Christians are alienated from the main social stream everywhere in Pakistan and that the public at large is responsible for their miseries. Noticing that most of the…[Read more]
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Behnam M. Fomeshi deposited Green Apples, Red Apples: Politics of Comparative Literature in Iran in the group
Islamicate Studies on Humanities Commons 4 years, 10 months agoFomeshi, Behnam M. “Green Apples, Red Apples: Politics of Comparative Literature in Iran.” Comparative Literature Around the World: Global Practice. Eds. Eugene Eoyang, Gang Zhou, and Jonathan Hart. Paris: Honoré Champion, 2021. 201-218.
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Muhammad Akram deposited Islamic Culture and Western Civilization: The Prospects of Coexistence in the Thought of Alija Izetbegović in the group
Islamicate Studies on Humanities Commons 4 years, 10 months agoAlija Ali Izetbegović (1925-2003) is one of the outstanding Muslim thinkers in recent history who have re-conceptualized the Islamic worldview and ethos in the context of the contemporary world on the one hand and critically reflected upon the modern Western civilization, on the other. Izetbegović conceives Islam as a system representing a m…[Read more]
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Muhammad Akram deposited Foundations of the Descriptive Study of Religions in Muslim History: A Conceptual Analysis. in the group
Islamicate Studies on Humanities Commons 4 years, 10 months agoThe classical Muslim scholarly tradition produced an assortment of literature on different religions including a considerable number of descriptive studies, a phenomenon that leaves imposing questions. Most importantly, how a pre-modern civilization was able to generate a tradition of descriptive scholarship on different religions in the absence…[Read more]
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Muhammad Akram deposited The Study of Religions in Premodern Muslim Civilization: Some Distinctions Concerning Its Disciplinary Status in the group
Islamicate Studies on Humanities Commons 4 years, 10 months agoScholars have made contesting claims about the nature and scale of works on religions by Muslim scholars before modern times. The present paper explores various primary and secondary sources, especially the classical bibliographical indexes that the scholarly tradition under scrutiny itself produced, and classifies these works into three types:…[Read more]
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A. Hilal Ugurlu deposited Philanthropy in the Form of a Hair Strand: Sacred Relics in Nineteenth-Century Ottoman Lands in the group
Islamicate Studies on Humanities Commons 5 years agoFrom the last quarter of the eighteenth century, the caliphal status and the legitimacy of the Ottoman sultans were constantly and increasingly challenged. One of the most effective and powerful tools that they utilized in order to strengthen their diminishing image in the eyes of their subjects was the re-appropriation of sacred places, either by…[Read more]
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Alexandre Roberts deposited In Mecca’s Backyard in the group
Islamicate Studies on Humanities Commons 5 years agoReview of The Red Sea from Byzantium to the Caliphate: AD 500–1000, by Timothy Power (American University in Cairo, 2012).
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Gregor M. Schwarb deposited A Hamaḏānian Patchwork in the group
Islamicate Studies on Humanities Commons 5 years, 4 months agoAmong the numerous Jewish uṣūl al-dīn compositions in the Second Firkovitch Collection at the Russian National Library in St. Petersburg there is one that I have labelled “A Hamaḏānian Patchwork”. You might just as well call it “A Persian Carpet”. It is another magnificent specimen of “diachronic intertextualities”.
The treatise, which is…[Read more] -
Lloyd Graham deposited The Magic Symbol Repertoire of Talismanic Rings from East and West Africa in the group
Islamicate Studies on Humanities Commons 5 years, 4 months agoIn West Africa, Berber groups such as the Tuareg use inscribed silver jewelry – rings, pendants and plaques – as talismans. A ring with a curved or flat frontal area may be inscribed with a linear cipher or, if large, carry a “magic square” design. A survey of 132 Tuareg/Berber items revealed that the symbol repertoire appears to be drawn from ov…[Read more]
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Lloyd Graham deposited A comparison of the Seven Seals in Islamic esotericism and Jewish Kabbalah in the group
Islamicate Studies on Humanities Commons 5 years, 5 months agoIn Islamic mysticism and theurgy, the Seven Seals represent in graphic form the Greatest Name of God; in Jewish Kabbalah, the Seals bear individual Divine Names which collectively form a “Great Name.” We review and compare the primary interpretations and secondary associations for each Seal in Islam and Judaism, from which it is clear that the two…[Read more]
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