1st Edition

An Anthropology of the Qur’an

By Ahmed Achrati Copyright 2022
226 Pages
by Routledge

226 Pages
by Routledge

226 Pages
by Routledge

This book presents an anthropological study of the Qur’an, offering an unprecedented challenge to some of the epistemological and metaphysical assumptions of the tawḥīdic discourses. Combining primary textual materials and anthropological analysis, this book examines transcendence as a core principle of the Qur’an, uniquely signified in the divine name al-Quddūs (the Holy). It shows how the... Read more

Part 1 1. Religion, the Holy and the Sacred: An Anthropological Perspective  2. Al-Quddūs (The Holy) and Transcendental Écart in the Qur’ān  3 Ontological Distinction of the Holy and the Sacred in the Qur’ān  4. Transcendence and Divine Freedom in the Qur’ān  5 Tawḥīd, God, the Qur’ān, and Being  6 Al-Quddūs and Divine Otherness  7 Tawḥīdic Authorizing Discourses and the Inversion of al-Quddūs  8 The Qur’ān and the Tawḥīdic Sublimation of the Sunna  9 The Qur’ān, Muḥammad, and the Disclosure of the Holy; 10 The Qur’ān, the Sunna, and Authority in Modern Islam  Part 2  11 Gender: The Tawḥīdic Sexual Morality  12 ḤILM: The Forgotten Ethics of Islam  13 The Qur’ān and Islamic Art  14 Ribā (Usury): Economic Excess and Excessive Morality

Biography

Ahmed Achrati holds an LL.B from the University of Oran, Algeria, an LL.M from New York University School of Law, and a Ph.D. in international relations from the University of Pennsylvania. He continues to do research in anthropology and prehistoric rock art. Currently, he teaches courses on the Qur’an and Modern Society and Prehistoric Rock Art at the Osher Lifelong Learning Institute in the Washington, DC, area.