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ISBN: PB: 9780226143187

ISBN: HB: 9780226471075

University of Chicago Press

February 2014

336 pp.

23x15 cm

PB:
£30,00
QTY:
HB:
£43,50
QTY:

Jews, Christians, and the Abode of Islam

Modern Scholarship, Medieval Realities

In "Jews, Christians, and the Abode of Islam", Jacob Lassner examines the triangular relationship that during the Middle Ages defined – and continues to define today – the political and cultural interaction among the three Abrahamic faiths. Lassner looks closely at the debates occasioned by modern Western scholarship on Islam to throw new light on the social and political status of medieval Jews and Christians in various Islamic lands from the seventh to the thirteenth centuries. Utilizing a vast array of primary sources, Lassner balances the rhetoric of literary and legal texts from the Middle Ages with other, newly published medieval sources, describing life as it was actually lived among the three faith communities. Lassner shows just what medieval Muslims meant when they spoke of tolerance, and how that abstract concept played out at different times and places in the real world of Christian and Jewish communities under Islamic rule. Finally, he considers what a more informed picture of the relationship among the Abrahamic faiths in the medieval Islamic world might mean for modern scholarship on medieval Islamic civilization and, not the least, for the highly contentious global environment of today.

Reviews

"Written in clear language and with immense erudition by a serious scholar, 'Jews, Christians, and the Abode of Islam' is a unique and thoroughly unconventional work that will certainly stimulate a great deal of critical discussion" – Ross Brann, Cornell University

"Providing an attractive perspective on the marketplace of ideas and beliefs that united and divided Jews, Christians, and Muslims in the Mediterranean world, this is a remarkable book. Clear, thoughtful, the harvest of fifty years of labor in fields largely verdant and occasionally stony, Professor Lassner's book describes and explains the formation of the great monotheistic communities – and also provides a history of the development of the scholarly discussions that have enlivened, illuminated, and occasionally tarnished mutual understandings. A century ago, the great scholar of the spread of Islamic civilization and the mutual exchanges with the Jewish and Christian communities was Ignaz Goldziher, who astonished the teachers of Cairo with the depth of his knowledge and his empathic attitude. Lassner embraces Goldziher's textually oriented critical outlook while retaining as well the great orientalist's empathy for Islamic civilization" – Rudi Paul Lindner, University of Michigan

"Jacob Lassner's new study of the interaction among Muslims, Christians, and Jews in both history and historiography is a learned, energetic romp through Islamic history, Western scholarship on Islam, and Muslim views of Western Islamic scholarship. It is an unexpectedly personal book, bespeaking unflagging, even infectious, enthusiasm for the study of Islam on the part of an erudite senior academic authority on Islamic history. Demolishing the late-twentieth-century attacks on orientalism, it conveys the author's pride in being an heir to the great orientalist tradition that began in nineteenth-century Germany and continues in our own time to illuminate Islam using the tools of philology and history. Written in a conversational voice, without footnotes or technical digressions, the book will be an eye-opener to anyone who is interested in Western and Islamic interaction" – Raymond P. Scheindlin, Jewish Theological Seminary of America