1st Edition

Tantawi Jawhari and the Qur'an Tafsir and Social Concerns in the Twentieth Century

By Majid Daneshgar Copyright 2018
194 Pages 9 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

194 Pages 9 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

194 Pages 9 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

Shaykh Ṭanṭāwī Jawharī was an Egyptian exegete known for having produced a scientific interpretation of the Qurʾān. A pioneering scholar in terms of familiarising the people of his time with many previously neglected matters regarding Islam and science, his publications shocked the Cairo educational system and other Muslim places of learning in the early twentieth century. This book examines... Read more

Foreword

Acknowledgment

Preface

PART ONE: Ṭanṭāwī Jawharī: His Life and Thoughts

1 Introduction: Rational Progress and the Reception of a Modern Tafsīr

2 Background and Social Concerns

3 A Mufassir and Nature

PART TWO: Inside and Outside of a Tafsīr

4 An Approach to Science in the Qurʾān

5 Europeans in a Twentieth-Century Tafsīr: A Different View

6 Post-Jawharism: Maurice Bucaille, the Qurʾān and Science

PART THREE: Reading the Qurʾān with Ṭanṭāwī Jawharī

7 114 Sūras Final Thought

Appendix

Ṭanṭāwī Jawharī’s books and treatises

Einstein’s Theory of Relativity

Bibliography

Biography

Majid Daneshgar teaches Islamic Studies at the University of Otago, New Zealand. His research interests pertain to the connection between Islamic intellectual and exegetical progress in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries as well as Malay Islamic studies. His main volumes are: Islamic Studies Today: Essays in Honor of Andrew Rippin, co-edited with Walid A. Saleh (2016) and The Qur’ān in the Malay-Indonesian World: Context and Interpretation, co-edited with Peter G. Riddell and Andrew Rippin (Routledge 2016)

Daneshgar’s scrupulous study of the life and thought of Ṭanṭāwī Jawharī is a substantial contribution to the field of Quranic studies which also sheds light on one of the significant aspects of the Islamic reform movement, i.e. its stance towards science in the nineteenth century. Mahmoud Pargoo, in the British Journal of Middle Eastern Studies