Studies in early Muslim jurisprudence
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Studies in early Muslim jurisprudence
Clarendon Press, 1993
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Note
Bibliography: p. [248]-254
Includes index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
A study of the origins and early development of Islamic law, this book illuminates the social, political, and intellectual background of the earliest works of Muslim jurisprudence. The author grounds his argument in a series of representative passages from the earliest juristic works, many of them translated here for the first time. Succeeding chapters demonstrate the creativity of early Muslim civilization in literary forms, juristic norms and hermeneutic technique. Drawing on the tradition of Islamic scholarship represented by such names as Ignaz Goldziher, Joseph Schacht, and John Wansborough, Dr Calder is sensitive to the development of methodology and technique in the parallel fields of Biblical and Rabbinical studies. His approach, however, is eclectic. Grounding all his major generalizations in precise textual detail, he evokes the social, political and intellectual concerns of Muslim civilization in its most formative period. Dr Calder demonstrates that many of the usual connotations are not appropriate to the understanding of early Muslim jurisprudence.
This emerged in a literary world characterized by the organic growth of texts within communities, the institutional preservation of traditional meterial, sequential reactions and ongoing reformulations of argument and norm. The surviving texts constitute a lively record of how the early Muslim community created the major symbols of its own identity.
Table of Contents
- The "Mudawwana" Sahnun
- the "Muwatta" of Malik
- early Hanafi texts
- the "Kitab al-Umm" of Shafi'i
- the "Mukhtasar" of Muzani
- the "Kitab al-Kharaj of Abu Josuf
- literary form and social context
- the origin of norms
- the development of hermeneutic skills, transitions.
by "Nielsen BookData"