The Medieval Islamic Republic of Letters: Arabic Knowledge Construction

Author:   Muhsin J. al-Musawi
Publisher:   University of Notre Dame Press
ISBN:  

9780268020446


Pages:   480
Publication Date:   15 April 2015
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
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The Medieval Islamic Republic of Letters: Arabic Knowledge Construction


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Author:   Muhsin J. al-Musawi
Publisher:   University of Notre Dame Press
Imprint:   University of Notre Dame Press
Dimensions:   Width: 15.20cm , Height: 3.30cm , Length: 22.90cm
Weight:   0.641kg
ISBN:  

9780268020446


ISBN 10:   0268020442
Pages:   480
Publication Date:   15 April 2015
Audience:   College/higher education ,  Tertiary & Higher Education
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us.

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The author's blend of literary and historical sources is compelling and strong. I wholeheartedly recommend this book to specialists, graduate students, and even advanced undergraduates interested in medieval Arabic literature, comparative literature, or world literatures. --Journal of Arabic Literature The author well argues . . . that a proper appreciation of [Islamic] heritage, and incorporation of those parts of it that are still very much alive among the masses, would establish the intellectual as part of his or her society, rather than leaving him or her on its ineffective margins. --Common Knowledge Brilliantly building off of and challenging Pascale Casanova's World Republic of Letters, Al-Musawi develops an alternative, manageable system through which to see the cultural products of the medieval Arab world in concert with one another. . . The research and immense scope of knowledge demonstrated in this text is invaluable for historians of Arab polities and literature alike. --Comitatus [It] is truly refreshing to see that a scholar of Arabic literature takes the literary production of Anatolia, Iran, and Central Asia seriously, and even takes the Timurid period into account. The Medieval Islamic republic of Letters is an extremely rich book that certainly paves the path for further research in Islamic literary and intellectual history. --Renaissance Quarterly Muhsin al-Musawi's The Medieval Islamic Republic of Letters is above all, a response to contemporary theories of modernity and modernism in all their various amnesias toward world literary history. . . . The end result is the best study I have read of medieval Islamic belles lettres and the most cogent critique of the ages of decline and Eurocentrism theses in a single blow. --SCTIW Review In The Medieval Islamic Republic of Letters, Muhsin al-Musawi draws on his expertise in the complex eras and literary traditions responsible for producing A Thousand and One Nights in order to interrogate the cultural production of Medieval Islam and demonstrate once and for all how such times have dismissively and erroneously been labeled 'the Ages of Decline.' In a patient and in-depth examination of a vast collection of primary and secondary sources, coupled with a thorough and insightful critique of Arabic and European schools of literary thought, and most notably poststructuralist theory, al-Musawi masterfully re-envisions the modalities of literary production that both formed and informed the cultural heritage of Medieval Islam. --al-Hayat Newspaper With this work, Muhsin J. al-Musawi . . . has produced perhaps the ultimate expression of his long interest in medieval and pre-modern Islamic culture--a ground-breaking comprehensive and rigorous study of that period's Arabic literary heritage and 'cultural capital, ' in which he unearths a dynamic and diverse 'Republic of Letters' . . . . This is a tremendously important work of scholarship that will enthrall many readers around the world, within and outside academia. --Magazine of Modern Arab Literature The innovation of this study lies not in the choice of its topic--for many have addressed it--but in its robust examination of medieval themes and intellectual ventures, as it were, in conversation with modern and contemporary theories. The book is also pioneering and timely in transcending traditional single-author scholarship on classical and medieval Arabic, while avoiding both atomization and the traditional line-by-line analysis of the Arabic literary tradition. . . . The end result is the best study I have read of medieval Islamic belles lettres and the most cogent critique of 'the ages of decline' and Eurocentrism theses in a single blow. --Journal of the Society for Contemporary Thought and the Islamicate World Muhsin al-Musawi, who has already written a number of smaller studies on the premodern period of Arabic creativity, now crowns his achievements with a lengthy study that should finally put to rest the Orientalist-inspired notion of a 'period of decadence' in the Arab-Islamic cultural heritage. Pointing out the differing aesthetic criteria with which previous generations of Western scholars have had such difficulty with engaging and comprehending, al-Musawi makes telling use of an enormous range of texts in order to analyze and prioritize cultural and literary trends over several medieval centuries and to demonstrate the ways in which successive generations of creative writers and those who commented on their output created a cultural milieu of considerable sophistication. --Roger Allen, Sascha Jane Patterson Harvie Professor Emeritus of Social Thought and Comparative Ethics, University of Pennsylvania Muhsin al-Musawi's work systematizes a huge body of primary literary texts and current scholarship under a compelling and original thesis. The Medieval Islamic Republic of Letters will be the starting point for a new generation of scholarship on this six-hundred-year 'republic of letters' that stretched from India to North Africa. --Suzanne P. Stetkevych, Sultan Qaboos bin Said Professor of Arabic and Islamic Studies, Georgetown University This significant and timely monograph challenges the old paradigms of the 'Age of Decay' and the 'Awakening' critique through a new theoretical lens. The innovative theoretical framework, inspired by various schools of literary/cultural studies and postcolonial discourse, is informed by Muhsin al-Musawi's close readings of the original--mostly Arabic; some Persian and Turkish--texts and his contextualization centered around 'the learned network' in Cairo and Damascus and its impact on the production of knowledge at the time, all the way to modernity. The Medieval Islamic Republic of Letters is an important work for specialists and will appeal to those interested in Islamic humanism, comparative literature, and cultural studies. --Li Guo, University of Notre Dame


Muhsin al-Musawi, who has already written a number of smaller studies on the premodern period of Arabic creativity, now crowns his achievements with a lengthy study that should finally put to rest the Orientalist-inspired notion of a 'period of decadence' in the Arab-Islamic cultural heritage. Pointing out the differing aesthetic criteria with which previous generations of Western scholars have had such difficulty with engaging and comprehending, al-Musawi makes telling use of an enormous range of texts in order to analyze and prioritize cultural and literary trends over several medieval centuries and to demonstrate the ways in which successive generations of creative writers and those who commented on their output created a cultural milieu of considerable sophistication.--Roger Allen, Sascha Jane Patterson Harvie Professor Emeritus of Social Thought and Comparative Ethics, University of Pennsylvania


The author's blend of literary and historical sources is compelling and strong. I wholeheartedly recommend this book to specialists, graduate students, and even advanced undergraduates interested in medieval Arabic literature, comparative literature, or world literatures. --Journal of Arabic Literature, vol. 47, 2016 The author well argues . . . that a proper appreciation of [Islamic] heritage, and incorporation of those parts of it that are still very much alive among the masses, would establish the intellectual as part of his or her society, rather than leaving him or her on its ineffective margins. --Common Knowledge, vol. 22, no. 3, 2016 Brilliantly building off of and challenging Pascale Casanova's World Republic of Letters, Al-Musawi develops an alternative, manageable system through which to see the cultural products of the medieval Arab world in concert with one another. . . The research and immense scope of knowledge demonstrated in this text is invaluable for historians of Arab polities and literature alike. --Comitatus, 47 (2016) [It] is truly refreshing to see that a scholar of Arabic literature takes the literary production of Anatolia, Iran, and Central Asia seriously, and even takes the Timurid period into account. The Medieval Islamic republic of Letters is an extremely rich book that certainly paves the path for further research in Islamic literary and intellectual history. --Renaissance Quarterly, vol. 69, no. 4, 2016


Author Information

Muhsin J. al-Musawi is professor of Arabic and comparative studies at Columbia University.

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