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Representations of the Divine in Arabic Poetry

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In Islam the fascination for “the word” is as vigorous as in Judaism and in Christianity, but an extra dimension is, that the revealed text, the Koran, is considered to be verbatim the word of the ...
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  • 01 January 2001
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In Islam the fascination for “the word” is as vigorous as in Judaism and in Christianity, but an extra dimension is, that the revealed text, the Koran, is considered to be verbatim the word of the Almighty Himself, thereby providing the Arabic language with just an extra quality. No wonder that throughout Islamic history the study of the word, the Koran, the prophet’s utterances and the interpretation of both, has become the main axis of knowledge and education.
As a consequence the intellectuals – and also the poets in Islamic culture - were thoroughly familiar with religious terms and the phraseology of a language which was highly estimated because of the divine origin with which it was associated. No wonder therefore, that allusions to religious texts can be found throughout Arabic literature, both classical and modern.
The subject of this volume is the representation of the divine in Arabic poetry, be it the experience of the divine as expressed by poets or the use of imagery coined by religion.
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Price: $149.00
Pages: 239
Publisher: Brill
Imprint: Brill
Series: Orientations
Publication Date: 01 January 2001
ISBN: 9789042015746
Format: Paperback
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”…a pleasurable reading that affords a peep into the area under study from a rather unfamiliar angle. …may prove quite revealing…” in: Islamic Studies, Vol 41, No. 2, Summer 2002