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The genesis of literature in Islam : from the aural to the written

Part of the The new Edinburgh Islamic surveys series
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In the beginning was the Qur'an, the first book of Islam and also the first book of Arabic literature.

Occasioned by the need to understand and interpret the word of God, and the teachings of the Prophet Muhammad, Muslims made an inventory and study of their tradition.

This involved the collection, transmission and instruction of the sacred text, of the words and deeds of Muhammad, and also of poetry, from both before and after the rise of Islam - indeed of all matters regarded as pertinent to the proper and scholarly study of the tradition.

This activity, which began in the last third of the seventh century, relied predominantly on aural study with a master, that is, on oral communication between teacher and student, although writing was already an integral part of this process.

In the present work Gregor Schoeler explains how Muslim scholarship evolved from aural to read. The result was the genesis of one of the richest literatures of late antiquity and the early middle ages, as is clear from the widespread dissemination of scholarship through writing and the attendant proliferation of books.

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Product Details
Edinburgh University Press
0748624686 / 9780748624683
Paperback / softback
31/01/2009
United Kingdom
English
160 p.
Undergraduate Learn More
Published in Scotland.