__________________________________________________

Call for Papers

Theme: Commentaries read horizontally
Subtitle: Towards a sociological approach to the study of
commentaries in the Islamicate world
Type: International Conference
Institution: Research Group for Islamicate Intellectual History,
University of Bonn
Location: Bonn (Germany)
Date: 25.–27.1.2019
Deadline: 28.2.2018

__________________________________________________


For a long time, Islamicate commentary literature was ignored almost
entirely by Western scholarship due to the conviction that
commentaries merely repeated previous writings without or with little
innovative potential. Only recently has the vast commentary tradition
of the Islamicate world in general and of the Middle Islamic Period
in particular received an increased scholarly interest. Locating the
commentaries in a tradition of knowledge transmission and evolution,
several recent studies have scrutinized commentaries more closely for
the processes of adding explanatory information (šarḥ, ḥāšiya),
abridging and synthesizing knowledge (iḫtiṣār), or versifying the
contents (manẓūma) within different disciplines, hence have read them
vertically (i.e., across time).

Besides the tendency of commentaries to initiate and further
processes of knowledge specialization and differentiation, a close
examination of the social context of the commentaries’ authors can
also reveal the social functions of the texts. Whenever an author
decides to comment on a previous work, he takes this decision not
only because of the intrinsic quality of the work itself, but a
variety of social and political reasons are usually part of this
decision. The commentator might feel a deep attachment to the work or
the author for close social relations or intellectual affinity. In
other cases, the work might be perceived as part of the intellectual
and cultural ‘capital’ of a certain group that the author of the
commentary writes to attain status or recognition within a specific
group. The work commented on might also be the arena for an
intellectual rivalry played out in defending or criticizing the work,
including for, but not restricted to, political patronage, or to
reinforce general political support or suppression of a certain
intellectual trend. All those considerations distinguish commentary
literature from other genres, since they already implicitly and
sometimes even explicitly express a variety of intellectual and
social alliances and rivalries.

Hence, the conference and the planned publication aim for a holistic
approach to commentary literature, reading them horizontally (across
space, including social space) as well as vertically, and
understanding the commentary’s contents on the one hand and the
author’s social and political context on the other as two
complementary and equally necessary elements of the analysis. The
social context goes a long way in explaining the author’s choice to
comment on a work and the way he does that. Vice versa, those very
factors reveal additional information about the author’s motivation
and the audience he had in mind while compiling the commentary. Only
if text and context are analyzed together can commentary literature
be seen in its full function, intellectually and socially.

Papers are welcome that focus on a commentary tradition in one of the
fields of Islamic studies, such as Islamic Jurisprudence (fiqh),
ḥadīth, Qurʾān commentaries (tafsīr), Grammar, Medicine, Philosophy,
Logic, Kalām, Ṣufism etc. Papers focusing on the 12th to 16th
centuries with a regional focus on Egypt and Syria are especially
welcome taking into account the shared political, social, economic,
and intellectual context in this time and region. However, for
comparative reasons, studies on other periods and regions are welcome
as well, provided they sufficiently contextualize the selected
commentary tradition in its social, political, and intellectual
background. Studies should be guided by the following lead questions:
When and why did the selected commentary tradition start and end? How
are the authors of the commentaries related to each other and to the
author of the commented work? What are the new elements that were
brought by the commentary into the knowledge tradition and how are
they connected to the social, political, and intellectual life of the
author? What functions do the commentaries fulfill? Is there any
political patronage or policies that could have influenced the
commentaries? Are the commentaries connected – and therefore possibly
limited to – certain regions or teaching institutions?

Organization

The conference will be organized and the proceedings edited by
Mohammad Gharaibeh, academic coordinator of the Alexander von
Humboldt Kolleg for Islamicate Intellectual History, University of
Bonn. The conference will take place in Bonn from January 25th–27th
2019. Expenses for travel and accommodation will be covered by the
AvH Kolleg. The papers will be peer reviewed and the volume is
foreseen to be published in the series Islamicate Intellectual
History (Brill, eds. Shahzad Bashir, Heidrun Eichner, and Judith
Pfeiffer).

Time Frame

Please submit proposals by February 28, 2018, including the title of
the contribution and an abstract of about 300 words. Once the paper
has been accepted, you will be asked to hand in a manuscript of about
10 pages by October 31, 2018 (can already be the talk for the
conference, about 30 min talk). The first draft of the full article
will be due by March 31, 2019 (10.000–20.000 words)

For more information please contact Mohammad Gharaibeh at:
mgharai...@uni-bonn.de

Contact:

Dr. Mohammad Gharaibeh, Academic Coordinator
Alexander von Humboldt Kolleg
for Islamicate Intellectual History
Bonn University
Adenauerallee 4-6
D-53113 Bonn
Germany
Tel.: +49 228 73-54420
Email: mgharai...@uni-bonn.de
Web:
https://www.academia.edu/35692792/Commentaries_read_horizontally_-_CfP.pdf




__________________________________________________


InterPhil List Administration:
https://interphil.polylog.org

InterPhil List Archive:
https://www.mail-archive.com/interphil@list.polylog.org/

__________________________________________________

 

Reply via email to