Themes in Qur'anic Studies
Editors
Mustafa Shah [+–]
S.O.A.S.
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Mustafa Shah is a Senior Lecturer in Islamic Studies in the Near and Middle East Department, SOAS. His principal research and teaching interests include early Arabic linguistic thought; theology and jurisprudence; and Qur’anic hermeneutics and exegesis. He has recently edited a four-volume collection of published articles on Qur’anic commentary entitled Tafsir: Interpreting the Qur’an (Routledge, 2013) and a similar work devoted to the Prophetic traditions, The Hadith (Routledge, 2010). Previously, he has published articles on the subject of Qur’anic readings, the early Arabic linguistic tradition, and aspects of theological thought. More recently, as well as contributing to various projects such as the Encyclopaedia of Arabic Language and Linguistics (E.J. Brill) and the Oxford Bibliographies Online: Arabic and Islam: an annotated introduction and bibliography (Oxford University Press, 2010), he has been working on a number of monographs and articles including Interpreting the Qur’an: Classical Hermeneutics (Edinburgh University Press, 2010).
Abdul-Hakim al-Matroudi [+–]
S.O.A.S.
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Adbul-Hakim al-Matroudi is a visiting professor of Arabic in the Near and Middle East Department at SOAS. His research interests include classical jurisprudence and the Hanbalite school of law; and he takes an active interest in the field of translation and legal theory. He has published extensively in the field of Islamic law including works in Arabic and English; among these are a recent edition of Jamal al-Din al-Asnawi’s Tiraz al-Mahafil Maktabat al-Rushd, (Riyadh 2004). He has recently edited a critical edition of al-Jira’i famous legal text entitled Hilyat al-tiraz fi hal masail al-alghaz (Maktabat al-Rushd, Riyadh, 2007). Professor Matroudi has published in the field of Prophetic traditions, translating On Schacht’s origins of Muhammadan Jurisprudence by Professor M. Mustafa Al-Azami. (King Saud University, 2006). And most significantly he is the author of the influential study of Ibn Taymiyya entitled The Hanbali School of Law and Ibn Taymiyyah: Conflict or Conciliation, (Routledge, London, 2006).
This series aims to introduce critical issues in the academic study of The Qur'an and offers a variety of topics essential to providing an historical overview of The Qur'an and the interrelated traditional teachings and beliefs which issue from it.