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General Information
Course
description
prerequisites
objectives
texts
COURSE DESCRIPTION
This
course is a non-theological approach to understanding the Qur’an as a
literary text. Topics will include:
• Orientalism and the study of Islam
• History of the Qur’anic text
• The Qur’an and the Prophet Muhammad
• Form, style, and structure
• Ritual aspects of the Qur'an
• Problems of translation
• Commentary and interpretation
• Contemporary understandings of the Qur’an
The format each week will generally be to spend the first hour on
lecture and discussion on particular themes in the understanding of the
Qur'an. Then after a short break, we will spend the rest of the time
closely reading selected suras from the Qur'an in translation. Students
should always bring at least one translation of the Qur'an to class,
and preferably two.
The
general philosophy underlying this course is laid out in my article, "Reading Strategies for Introducing the Qur'an
As Literature."
PREREQUISITES
A
background in literature, religious studies, or Islamic studies will be
extremely helpful. Previous experience with writing a research paper is
necessary. As in all courses in religious studies in a public
university, this class is based on intellectual analysis, rather than
advocacy or rejection of anyone's religious belief.
COURSE
OBJECTIVES
The basic goals
of the course are three:
Gaining
information about the text of the Qur'an, its history, use, and
interpretation: The Qur'an is obviously an important
historical text. We will attempt to understand how it came into
existence, how it has been transmitted and employed, and some of the
chief ways in which it has been interpreted. In addition to studying
and discussing the main text for the course, each student will also be
expected to gain familiarity with one particular problem or topic that
will be studied in greater depth with a research paper.
Understanding
problems related to the study
of religion: to equip you with tools to evaluate the ways
in which religion is conceptualized and enacted in different contexts.
The particular problems that we will discuss will include
"essentialism" (the belief that a particular religion is always the
same, regardless of
history or variables such as politics), conflicting interpretations of
religious texts, the nature of ideology.
Developing
analytical skills: to refine skills in thinking and
writing, so that after the course students will be able to offer
informed and insightful analysis of related topics.
TEXTS
- Discovering
the Quran: A Contemporary Approach to a Veiled Text, by Neal
Robinson (Georgetown University Press, 2004; ISBN: 1589010248)
- The
Qur'an (Oxford World's Classics Hardcovers), trans. by Muhammad
Abdel Haleem (Oxford University Press, 2004; ISBN: 0192805487)
- Introduction
to the Qur'an, by W. Montgomery Watt (Edinburgh University Press,
2001; ISBN: 0748605975)
- The
Koran: A Very Short Introduction, by Michael Cook (Oxford
University Press, 2000: ISBN: 0192853449)
- New
unpublished literary translations of the Qur’an by W. N. Crest
- We will
make frequent use of the new Encyclopaedia of the Qur'an
(Davis Library Reference, call number BP133 .E53 2001-- this is not
available online!).
- We will
also use selected texts, recitations, and images available on the
Internet.
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