Hardship and deliverance in the Islamic tradition : theology and spirituality in the works of Al-Tanūkhī

Author(s)

    • Khalifa, Nouha

Bibliographic Information

Hardship and deliverance in the Islamic tradition : theology and spirituality in the works of Al-Tanūkhī

Nouha Khalifa

(Library of Middle East history, 25)

Tauris Academic Studies , Distributed in the U.S. and Canada exclusively by Palgrave Macmillan, 2010

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Note

Bibliography: p. [263]-269

Includes index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Al-Tanuki was a judge who was born in Basra and lived in Baghdad during the tenth century CE. During his life, he wrote three books which compiled poetry, stories, anecdotes and hadith. In this introduction to al-Tanuki's works and thought, Nouha Khalifa identifies the central theme of hardship and deliverance within wider narratives about love, generosity and the journey. Al-Tanuki was principally concerned with how humankind can alleviate hardship and suffering in life and achieve deliverance. His unshakable conviction in the necessity of deliverance was rooted in his Mu'tazilite doctrine, an early school of Sunni Islamic theology which sought to ground Islamic tenets in reason, and which drew upon different aspects of early Islamic philosophy, Greek philosophy and Hellenistic philosophy. This is a fascinating commentary on medieval Middle Eastern culture, history, philosophy and religious thought.

Table of Contents

Introduction 1. Al-Tanuki's Sources 2. The 'Journey' 3. Love 4. Generosity 5. Conclusion

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