The reception of academic scholarship

The Academic Study of The Qur'an - Andrew Rippin

Andrew Rippin [+-]
University of Victoria, (Emeritus)
Andrew Rippin is Professor Emeritus of Islamic History at the University of Victoria in Canada. He has recently been appointed as a Senior Research Fellow at the Institute of Ismaili Studies in London. He was made a Fellow of the Royal Society of Canada in 2006. Rippin is the author of numerous books, among which are The Qur’an and its Interpretative Tradition (2001), which gathers many of his articles, and the two-volume text-book Muslims, their Religious Beliefs and Practices (4th edition, 2012). He is also well known for his edited volumes, among which are the influential Approaches to the History of the Interpretation of the Qur’an (1988), The Qur’an: Style and Contents (2001) and the Blackwell Companion to the Qur’an (2006).

Description

Charting developments in the history of the academic study of the Qur’an, this book examines the key debates and methodological issues which have defined the attendant discourses. Assessing the profound influence of the work of figures such as Theodore Nöldeke, Abraham Geiger, Gustav Weil and Ignaz Goldziher, it considers not only historical antecedents for the study of the Qur’an, but also the impact that biblical criticism and the study of the Semitic languages had upon the developing scholarship. Key preliminary questions include the technical parameters of academic scholarship of the Qur’an, insider-outsider perspectives, secular and confessional approaches, claims about truth value statements and the intrusion of polemical discourse into scholarly work. Attention is paid to the discrete contributions to the field made by scholars such as Richard Bell, Régis Blachère, Rudi Paret, Montgomery Watt, Toshihiko Izutsu, and Fazlur Rahman with the aim of circumscribing paradigms, strategies, and methodologies which have impacted upon current discourses. This seeks to identify key suppositions and preconceptions, assessing their importance, while also drawing attention to the critique of the epistemological foundations of the academic scholarship as ventured in the work of Mohammed Arkoun. The impact of the work of John Wansbrough with its accentuation of the literary interrogation of the sources will be highlighted as will more recent endeavours, including projects such as the Encyclopaedia of the Qur’an and the Corpus Coranicum .

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Citation

Rippin, Andrew . The reception of academic scholarship. The Academic Study of The Qur'an. Equinox eBooks Publishing, United Kingdom. Sep 2016. ISBN 9781781790984. https://www.equinoxpub.com/home/view-chapter/?id=23792. Date accessed: 19 Apr 2024 doi: 10.1558/equinox.23792. Sep 2016

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