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Giovanna Calasso / 
Giuliano Lancioni(eds.):  

Dār al-islām / dār al-ḥarb: 
Territories, People, Identities

Studies in Law and Society, Vol 40
Leiden: Brill 2017, 420 pp., Illustr. (Englisch and French)


 — ISBN 978 90 04 32868 6

>>>Sarah Albrecht: 
Dār al-Islām Revisited

Territoriality in Contemporary Islamic Legal Discourse on Muslims in the West

Serie: Muslim Minorities, Band: 29

  • Leiden: Brill 2018,  

     

    xiv, 469 pp.


Verlagsinformation
This is the first collection of studies entirely devoted to the terminological pair dār al-islām / dar al-ḥarb, “the abode of Islam” and “the abode of war”, apparently widely known as representative of “the Islamic vision” of the world, but in fact almost unexplored. A team of specialists in different fields of Islamic studies investigates the issue in its historical and conceptual origins as well as in its reception within the different genres of Muslim written production. In contrast to the fixed and permanent categories they are currently identified with, the multifaceted character of these two notions and their shifting meanings is set out through the analysis of a wide range of contexts and sources, from the middle ages up to modern times.
Contributors are Francisco Apellániz, Michel Balivet, Giovanna Calasso, Alessandro Cancian, Éric Chaumont, Roberta Denaro, Maribel Fierro, Chiara Formichi, Yohanan Friedmann, Giuliano Lancioni, Yaacov Lev, Nicola Melis, Luis Molina, Antonino Pellitteri, Camille Rhoné-Quer, Francesca Romana Romani, Biancamaria Scarcia Amoretti, Roberto Tottoli, Raoul Villano, Eleonora Di Vincenzo and Francesco Zappa.

Editors:

Giovanna Calasso is full professor of History of Islamic Civilization at Sapienza University, Rome.
Her main research interests are historical-religious and cultural issues
 of Islamic Middle Ages: Islamization and conversion to Islam, tradition and change in Islamic thinking and travel literature.

Giuliano Lancioni is full professor of Arabic Language and Literature
 at Roma Tre University, Rome.
His fields of research are history of Arabic linguistic thinking,
Arabic formal and corpus linguistics.
He co-edited the volume The Word in Arabic (Brill, 2011).

Table of contents

Giovanna Calasso, Introduction:
Concepts, Words, Historical Realities of a “Classical” Dichotomy

Section I. Concepts and Terminology
— Giovanna Calasso, Constructing and Deconstructing
     the Opposition dār al-islām / dār al-ḥarb:
     Between Sources and Studies

— Giuliano Lancioni, The Missing dār:
     On Collocations in Classical Arabic dictionaries

— Biancamaria Scarcia Amoretti, Some Observations
     on 
dār al-ḥarb / dār al-islām in the Imami Context

Section II. Early Texts
— Roberta Denaro, Naming the Enemy’s Land:
     Definitions of 
dār al-ḥarb   in Ibn al-Mubārak’s Kitāb al-Jihād
— Roberto Tottoli, Dār al-islām / dār al-ḥarb
    in the 
  Tafsīr by Ibn Jarīr al-Ṭabarī and in Early Traditions
— Raoul Villano, The Qur’anic foundation of the dichotomy
     
dār al-islām / dār al-ḥarb: an unusual hypothesis

Section III. Law: theory and practice
— Éric Chaumont, Dār al-islām et dār al-ḥarb: Quelques réflexions
     à propos de la géographie théologico-politique sunnite classique, en regard
    du Kitāb al-Muhaḏḏab d’Abū Isḥāq al-Šīrāzī (m. 476/1083) 
— Francisco Apellániz, An Unknown Minority Between
     the 
dār al-ḥarb and the dār al-Islām
— Nicola Melis, Some Observations on the Concept of dār al-ʿahd in
     Ottoman Context (XVI-XVII c.) 

Section IV. History of specific areas
— Maribel Fierro and Luis Molina, Some Notes on dār al-ḥarb  in Early al-Andalus
— Camille Rhoné, Les émirs d’Iran nord-oriental
     face aux steppes turques (IXe-XIe siècle)

     entre légitimation, confrontation et cohabitation
— Michel Balivet, Dār al-islām ou bilād al-rūm? Le cas de l’Anatolie turque
     au Moyen-Âge

— Francesco Zappa, Une appartenance controversée :
     trois moments
 dans le débat autour du statut du bilād al-sūdān

Section V. Modern and contemporary developments
— Alessandro Cancian, Faith as Territory: dār al-islām and dār al-ḥarb   in Modern Shi’i Sufism
— Chiara Formichi, Dār al-islām and Darul Islam: from Political Ideal
     to Territorial Reality

— Yohanan Friedmann, Dār al-islām and dār al-ḥarb
     in Modern Indian Muslim Thought

— Antonino Pellitteri, Better barr al-ʿaduww Than dār al-ḥarb:
     Some Considerations about Eighteenth Century maġribī Chronicles
— Francesca Romana Romani and Eleonora Di Vincenzo, Muḥammad Bayram’s 
     Risāla fī dār al-ḥarb wa-suknāhā:
     A Modern Reinterpretation of Living in 
dār al-ḥarb

Giuliano Lancioni, Concluding remarks: The terminological array
t collection of studies entirely devoted to the terminological pair dār al-islām / dar al-ḥarb, “the abode of Islam” and “the abode of war”, apparently widely known as representative of “the Islamic vision” of the world, but in fact almost unexplored. A team of specialists in different fields of Islamic studies investigates the issue in its historical and conceptual origins as well as in its reception within the different genres of Muslim written production. In contrast to the fixed and permanent categories they are currently identified with, the multifaceted character of these two notions and their shifting meanings is set out through the analysis of a wide range of contexts and sources, from the middle ages up to modern times.Contributors are Francisco Apellániz, Michel Balivet, Giovanna Calasso, Alessandro Cancian, Éric Chaumont, Roberta Denaro, Maribel Fierro, Chiara Formichi, Yohanan Friedmann, Giuliano Lancioni, Yaacov Lev, Nicola Melis, Luis Molina, Antonino Pellitteri, Camille Rhoné-Quer, Francesca Romana Romani, Biancamaria Scarcia Amoretti, Roberto Tottoli, Raoul Villano, Eleonora Di Vincenzo and Francesco Zappa.

Editors:

Giovanna Calasso is full professor of History of Islamic Civilization at Sapienza University, Rome. Her main research interests are historical-religious and cultural issues of Islamic Middle Ages: Islamization and conversion to Islam, tradition and change in Islamic thinking and travel literature.

Giuliano Lancioni is full professor of Arabic Language and Literature at Roma Tre University, Rome. His fields of research are history of Arabic linguistic thinking, Arabic formal and corpus linguistics. He co-edited the volume The Word in Arabic (Brill, 2011).



Ein-Sichten, Mai 2017

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