Hadith Commentary: Continuity and Change

Hadith Commentary: Continuity and Change

Hadith Commentary: Continuity and Change

Hadith Commentary: Continuity and Change

 

Hadith Commentary: Continuity and Change

Edited by Joel Blecher, and Stefanie Brinkmann

Series: Edinburgh Studies in Islamic Scripture and Theology

Publisher: Edinburgh University Press

Publication Date: May 18, 2023

Pages: 312

ISBN: 9781474461047

 

Explores key texts and critical themes of hadith commentary

  • Represents a milestone for the field: the first-ever edited volume on the important subject of hadith commentary
  • Presents diverse case studies of hadith commentaries across time, place and sect
  • Delivers new insights into themes of Islam and politics, Islamic mysticism, Islamic law, Islamic philosophy and the digital humanities
  • Offers cross-disciplinary models of cutting-edge methods in textual studies from a group of international scholars

 

Hadith commentary has been a central site of Islamic intellectual life for more than a millennium, across diverse periods, regions and sects. This is the first volume of scholarly essays ever collected on the key texts and critical themes of hadith commentary. The book unfolds chronologically from the early centuries of Islam to the modern period, and readers will discover continuities and changes as a group of international experts offer illuminating studies of Sunnis, Shi‘i and Sufis who interpret and debate the meaning of hadith that spans a wide terrain: Egypt, Syria, Iraq, Iran, Turkey, India, and further. The volume also models a variety of methodological approaches, including social history, intellectual history, the study of religion, and digital history. By highlighting both differences and commonalities as the practice of hadith commentary circulated across distant eras and lands, this volume sheds new light on the way Muslims have historically understood the meaning of Muhammad’s example.

 

Table of Contents

  • Introduction: What is Hadith Commentary?
    by Joel Blecher and Stefanie Brinkmann
  • Part I: Formations and Developments in the Early and Middle Periods
  1. Between Philology and Hadith Criticism: The Genre of Sharḥ Gharīb al-Ḥadīth
    by Stefanie Brinkmann
  2. The Hermeneutics of al-Sharīf al-Murtaḍā: The Interpretation of akhbār al-āḥād in Kitāb al-Amālī
    by Ali Aghaei
  3. ‘Blessed are the Strangers (ghurabāʾ)’: An Apocalyptic Hadith on the Virtues of Loneliness, Sadness and Exile
    by Youshaa Patel
  4. Sufi Contributions to Hadith Commentary
    by Samer Dajani
  5. Ibn Rajab’s Commentary on al-Nawawī’s Forty Hadith: Innovation and Audience in the Jāmiʿ al-ʿulūm wa-l-ḥikam
    by Mohammad Gharaibeh
  6. The Words of the Imām beyond Philosophy and Tradition: Shīʿī Hadith Commentaries in the Ṣafavid Period
    by Sajjad Rizvi
  • Part II: Modern Recollections and Reimaginings
  1. Contesting Ḥanaf ī Thought in a Twentieth-century Turkish Hadith Commentary
    by Susan Gunasti
  2. Debating Authority and Authenticity in Modern South Asian Hadith Commentaries: Muḥammad Zakariyyā Kāndhalawī’
    by Awjaz al-masālik and Ali Altaf Mian
  3. ʿAllāma Ṭabāṭabāʾī and Exegetical Hadiths in al-Mῑzān: A Contemporary Imāmī Commentary on Hadith?
    by Shadi Nafisi
  4. Studying Hadith Commentaries in the Digital Age
    by Maroussia Bednarkiewicz, Aslisho Qurboniev and Gowaart Van Den Bossche
  • Afterword: More Comments, Further Questions
    by Joel Blecher

 

About the Editors

  • Joel Blecher is Associate Professor of History at the George Washington University in Washington, DC, the author of Said the Prophet of God: Hadith Commentary Across a Millennium(University of California Press, 2018), and co-translator of Ibn Ḥajar al-ʿAsqalānī’s Merits of the Plague (Penguin Classics, 2023). His other writings have appeared in the Journal of Near Eastern Studies, Islamic Law & Society, Oriens, and several edited volumes. His work has been supported by the National Endowment for the Humanities, the American Council of Learned Societies, the Library of Congress, and the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton.
  • Stefanie Brinkmann is Research Fellow at the “Bibliotheca Arabica Project” at the Saxon Academy of Sciences and Humanities in Leipzig. Trained in Arabic, Persian, and Roman Studies, she had acting professorships at the universities of Freiburg and Hamburg, and was member and principal investigator of a number of manuscript projects. She has published in the fields of manuscript studies, especially on hadith manuscripts, material culture in hadith, and classical Arabic poetry.

 

Source: Edinburgh University Press

Leave your thought here

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *


The reCAPTCHA verification period has expired. Please reload the page.