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Neither Belief nor Unbelief

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Studies in the History and Culture of the Middle East are published as supplement to Der Islam which was founded in 1910 by Carl Heinrich Becker, an early practitioner of the modern study of I...
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  • 19 December 2022
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The book re-examines the religious thought and receptions of the Syrian poet Abū l-ʿAlāʾ al-Maʿarrī (d.1057) and one of his best known works - Luzūm mā lā yalzam (The Self-Imposed Unnecessity), a collection of poems, which, although widely studied, needs a thorough re-evaluation regarding matters of (un)belief. Given the contradictory nature of al-Maʿarrī’s oeuvre and Luzūm in particular, there have been two major trends in assessing al-Maʿarrī’s religious thought in modern scholarship. One presented al-Maʿarrī as an unbeliever and a freethinker arguing that through contradictions, he practiced taqīya, i.e., dissimulation in order to avoid persecution. The other, often apologetically, presented al-Maʿarrī as a sincere Muslim. This study proposes that the notion of ambivalence is a more appropriate analytical tool to apply to the reading of Luzūm, specifically in matters of belief. This ambivalence is directly conditioned by the historical and intellectual circumstances al-Maʿarrī lived in and he intentionally left it unsolved and intense as a robust stance against claims of certainty. Going beyond reductive interpretations, the notion of ambivalence allows for an integrative paradigm in dealing with contradictions and dissonance.

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Price: $152.99
Pages: 215
Publisher: De Gruyter
Imprint: De Gruyter
Publication Date: 19 December 2022
ISBN: 9783110772531
Format: Hardcover
BISACs: HIS037010 HISTORY / Medieval, HIS037030 HISTORY / Modern / General, PHI022000 PHILOSOPHY / Religious, REL037000 RELIGION / Islam / General, REL037010 RELIGION / Islam / History
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Sona Grigoryan, Central European University, Budapest, Ungarn/Wien, Österreich.

Sona Grigoryan, Central European University, Budapest, Hungary/Wien, Austria.