The Qur'an: Modern Muslim Interpretations

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Routledge, Oct 4, 2010 - Religion - 160 pages
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The Qur’an: Modern Muslim Interpretations offers a lucid guide to how Muslims have read the Qur’an in the twentieth and twenty-first centuries. Massimo Campanini explores early approaches to the understanding of the Qur’an, including that of the Salafis and the construction of the Islamic Renaissance Movement, contrasting the development of traditionalist and ‘scientific’ interpretations and examining the work of the phenomenologists who followed. This lively book explores the radical ideas of Sayyid Qutb and his followers, a significant part of what is known as political Islamism, and investigates the idea of exegesis as a liberation theology, through the work of Esack and Wadud.

Students taking courses on the interpretation of the Qur’an will find this an invaluable aid to their study, and it is essential reading for all those interested in how Muslims have understood the Qur’an in the contemporary period.

 

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Contents

Translators introduction
Traditional commentary 8
The Quran as text discourse and structure 42
Sayyid Qutb 91
The Quran and the hermeneutics of liberation 105
Other areas of Quranic exegesis 123
Notes 128
Index 143
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About the author (2010)

Massimo Campanini is Professor of History of the Arab Countries at the Oriental University in Naples.

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