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Book
Le Coran : nouvelles approches
Authors: ---
ISBN: 9782271079183 2271079187 Year: 2013 Publisher: Paris: CNRS,

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Abstract

Sous l'impulsion de travaux novateurs, la recherche sur le Coran connait depuis deux decennies un profond bouleversement. Le largissement notable des sources (manuscrites, epigraphiques ou archeologiques), l'apport de méthodes d analyse renouvelees, particulierement de la reflexion hermeneutique, degagent des problematiques fecondes et ouvrent des perspectives originales. Les chercheurs francais et etrangers reunis dans cet ouvrage reinterrogent l'histoire du Coran en s'appuyant sur des sources inedites : manuscrits omeyyades, sources chiites, ou graffitis du desert. Ils examinent les conditions de son emergence dans un contexte qui est celui de l'Antiquite tardive. En questionnant les relations entre le Coran et les traditions scripturaires anterieures, ils parviennent a eclairer le travail de reecriture et de reappropriation de textes bibliques et talmudiques. Les outils de la linguistique leur permettent enfin d'analyser les formes litteraires et la langue du Coran. La relation complexe entre oralite et ecriture apparait ici en pleine lumiere, de meme que les specificites de ce texte en matiere d argumentation, de polemique ou de composition.


Book
Scripture, poetry, and the making of a community : reading the Qur'an as a literary text
Authors: ---
ISBN: 9780198701644 0198701640 Year: 2014 Volume: 10 Publisher: Oxford: Oxford university press,

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Abstract

We are used to understanding the Qur'an as the "Islamic text" par excellence, an assumption which, when viewed historically, is not evident at all. More than twenty years before it rose to the rank of Islamic Scripture, the Qur'an was an oral proclamation addressed by the Prophet Muhammad to pre-Islamic listeners, for the Muslim community had not yet been formed. We might best describe these listeners as individuals educated in late antique culture, be they Arab pagans familiar with the monotheistic religions of Judaism and Christianity or syncretists of these religions, or learned Jews and Christians whose presence is reflected in the Medinan suras. The interactive communication process between Muhammad and these groups brought about an epistemic turn in Arab Late Antiquity: with the Qur'anic discovery of writing as the ultimate authority, the nascent community attained a new 'textual coherence' where Scripture, with its valorisation of history and memory, was recognised as a guiding concept. It is within this new biblically imprinted world view that central principles and values of the pagan Arab milieu were debated. This process resulted in a twin achievement: the genesis of a new scripture and the emergence of a community. Two great traditions, then, the Biblical, transmitted by both Jews and Christians, and the local Arabic, represented in Ancient Arabic poetry, appear to have established the field of tension from which the Qur'an evolved; it is both Scripture and Poetry which have produced and shaped the new Muslim community.

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