Medieval interpretations of the ϳܰ’aMuslims believe that the Holy ϳܰ’a contains divine revelations to the Prophet Muhammed received in Mecca and Medina over a period of 23 years in the early 7th century CE. More often serve as points of reference for Muslim thought; yet ϳܰ’a commentaries were shaped not only by the ϳܰ’a itself, but also by their authors’ ideological viewpoints, their theories of interpretation, their methods, and the conventions of the genre.
This volume is the first to focus solely on the complicated relationship between exegetes’ theoretical aims, their practical methods of writing, and the historical and intellectual contexts of ϳܰ’a commentaries (ٲڲī). Experts in various aspects of the ϳܰ’a and its interpretation have contributed essays, spanning the 2nd/8th to the 9th/15th centuries, the period in which the commentarial tradition developed and flourished. They emphasise the ways in which geography, human networks, hermeneutical systems and genre boundaries affected the writing of these texts. This volume offers fresh analytical perspectives and addresses new methods for the study of ٲڲī. It also provides resources for scholars, by including editions and translations of the introductions to -īṭ of Abū’-Hasan ʿAlī al-Wāḥidī (d. 486/1076) and the ղī fī ղڲī al-Qurʾān of al-Ḥākim al-Jishumī (d. 494/1101), as well as translated selections from the introduction to the ٲڲī of ʿAbd al-Razzāq al-Kāshānī (d. 736/1336). The detailed studies in this volume will help scholars and students alike to comprehend accurately the purpose and content of ϳܰ’a commentaries individually and as a genre.
Notes on Contributors
Note on Transliteration, Conventions and Abbreviations
Introduction
Karen Bauer
I. The Aims of ղڲī
1. ղڲī and Unlocking the Historical ϳܰ’a: Back to Basics?
Feras Hamza
2. Justifying the Genre: A þþø of Introductions to Classical works of ղڲī
Karen Bauer
3. The Introduction to al-Wāḥidī’s -ī: An Edition, Translation and Commentary
Walid A. Saleh
4. Towards a Reconstruction of the Muʿtazilī Tradition of ϳܰ’aic Exegesis: Reading the Introduction to the ղī of al-Ḥākim al-Jishumī (d. 494/1101) and Its Application
Suleiman A. Mourad
II. Methods and Sources of ղڲī
5. Early Shi‘i Hermeneutics: Some Exegetical Techniques Attributed to the Shi‘i Imams
Robert Gleave
6. The Construction of the Arabian Historical Context in Muslim Interpretation of the ϳܰ’a
Andrew Rippin
7. Methods and Contexts in the Use of Hadiths in Classical ղڲī Literature: The Exegesis of Q. 21:85 and Q. 17:1
Roberto Tottoli
8. Letter by Letter: Tracing the Textual Genealogy of a Sufi ղڲī
Martin Nguyen
9. Fakhr al-Dīn al-Rāzī’s System of Inquiry
Tariq Jaffer
10. Master of the Obvious: Understanding Ẓāh Interpretations in ϳܰ’aic Exegesis
Ludmila Zamah
11. Jalāl al-Dīn al-Suyūṭī, the ѳʿɷɾ and the Modes of Exegesis
Stephen Burge
III. Contextualising ղڲī
12. A Schoolmaster, Storyteller, Exegete, and Warrior at Work in Khurāsān: al-Ḍaḥḥāk b. Muzāḥim al-Hilālī (d. 106/ 724)
Claude Gilliot
13. Methodologies for the Dating of Exegetical Works and Traditions: Can the Lost ղڲīof Kalbī be Recovered from ղڲī Ibn ʿAbbās (also known as -徱ḥ)?
Michael E. Pregill
Bibliography
Index of ϳܰ’aic Citations
General Index
‘[T]his is a highly valuable contribution to the field which stakes out the frontiers in tafsir studies. In doing so it shows the need to at reconstructing the exegetes’ hermeneutics. It also shows that early dating of sources and concepts appears to be becoming more plausible, possibly indicating that linguistics has functioned as the necessary sustenance of tafsir
– Ulrika Martensson, Journal of ϳܰ’aic Studies
Karen Bauer received her PhD from Princeton University (2008) and is currently a Research Associate at the Institute of Ismaili Studies. She specialises in ٲڲī and gender studies, particularly discourses on women’s status in ٲڲī. She is interested in placing these discourses in their social and intellectual contexts. To that end she has explored questions such as the audience for works of ٲڲī. She has also published on the question of women as judges in Islamic law and women’s status in the ϳܰ’a. She is currently preparing a monograph on the diachronic development of interpretations on women’s status in works of ٲڲī.