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Beyond Religious Borders

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The medieval Islamic world comprised a wide variety of religions. While individuals and communities in this world identified themselves with particular faiths, boundaries between these groups were ...
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  • 29 November 2011
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The medieval Islamic world comprised a wide variety of religions. While individuals and communities in this world identified themselves with particular faiths, boundaries between these groups were vague and in some cases nonexistent. Rather than simply borrowing or lending customs, goods, and notions to one another, the peoples of the Mediterranean region interacted within a common culture. Beyond Religious Borders presents sophisticated and often revolutionary studies of the ways Jewish, Christian, and Muslim thinkers drew ideas and inspiration from outside the bounds of their own religious communities.

Each essay in this collection covers a key aspect of interreligious relationships in Mediterranean lands during the first six centuries of Islam. These studies focus on the cultural context of exchange, the impact of exchange, and the factors motivating exchange between adherents of different religions. Essays address the influence of the shared Arabic language on the transfer of knowledge, reconsider the restrictions imposed by Muslim rulers on Christian and Jewish subjects, and demonstrate the need to consider both Jewish and Muslim works in the study of Andalusian philosophy. Case studies on the impact of exchange examine specific literary, religious, and philosophical concepts that crossed religious borders. In each case, elements native to one religious group and originally foreign to another became fully at home in both. The volume concludes by considering why certain ideas crossed religious lines while others did not, and how specific figures involved in such processes understood their own roles in the transfer of ideas.

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Price: $80.00
Pages: 232
Publisher: University of Pennsylvania Press, Inc.
Imprint: University of Pennsylvania Press
Series: Jewish Culture and Contexts
Publication Date: 29 November 2011
ISBN: 9780812206913
Format: eBook
BISACs: RELIGION / Judaism / History, History and Archaeology, RELIGION / History
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"Beyond Religious Borders is an important contribution to diverse fields of modern scholarship. It is a welcome addition to the ever-increasing corpus of studies that employ 'boundary crossing' as a methodological tool, suggesting to scholars a new, more sophisticated methodological conception of "border lines" in the Islamic Middle Ages. It is for all these reasons that I recommend this volume enthusiastically and without reservation."
David M. Freidenreich teaches Jewish studies at Colby College. Miriam Goldstein is Lecturer in the Department of Arabic Language and Literature at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem.

Introduction
—Miriam Goldstein

PART I. CONTEXTS OF INTERRELIGIOUS INTERACTION
Chapter 1. Observations on the Beginnings of Judeo-Arabic Civilization
—Haggai Ben-Shammai
Chapter 2. Shurūṭ 'Umar: From Early Harbingers to Systematic Enforcement
—Milka Levy-Rubin
Chapter 3. Thinkers of "This Peninsula": Toward an Integrative Approach to the Study of Philosophy in al-Andalus
—Sarah Stroumsa

PART II. ADOPTING AND ACCOMMODATING THE FOREIGN
Chapter 4. Translations in Contact: Early Judeo-Arabic and Syriac Biblical Translations
—Sagit Butbul
Chapter 5. Claims About the Mishna in the Epistle of Sherira Gaon: Islamic Theology and Jewish History
—Talya Fishman
Chapter 6. Maimonides and the Arabic Aristotelian Tradition of Epistemology
—Charles H. Manekin
Chapter 7. Ibrāhīm Ibn al-Fakhkhār al-Yahūdī: An Arabic Poet and Diplomat in Castile and the Maghrib
—Jonathan P. Decter

PART III. CROSSING BORDERS: AGENTS OF INTERACTION AND EXCHANGE
Chapter 8. The Impact of Interreligious Polemic on Medieval Philosophy
—Daniel J. Lasker
Chapter 9. Arabic into Hebrew: The Emergence of the Translation Movement in Twelfth-Century Provence and Jewish-Christian Polemic
—Gad Freudenthal
Chapter 10. Fusion Cooking in an Islamic Milieu: Jewish and Christian Jurists on Food Associated with Foreigners
—David M. Freidenreich

Notes
Index
Acknowledgments