ABOUT THE BOOK
In a richly narrated historical study, Youcef Soufi excavates an Islamic legal culture of critique from the 10th to 13th centuries. Focusing on the practice of munāẓara (disputation), Soufi explores how and why oral debates became a pervasive and revered part of the intellectual legal landscape of Iraq and Persia. Using the life and career of celebrated Iraqi jurist Abū Isḥāq al-Shīrāzī, he traces the formalization of debate gatherings at the dawn of the classical legal schools (al-madhāhib) in the early 10th century and analyzes the wider institutional, social, and discursive conditions that made debate an important feature of any jurist's practice.
Pushing back against claims that classical Muslim jurists sought to weed out differences of opinion, The Rise of Critical Islam presents a community committed to the openness, fluidity, and continued exploration of the law. Challenging the view of debate gatherings simply as mechanisms of doctrinal resolution before codification, the study reveals a classical culture where critical debates were part of a continual and personal quest to discover God's law. In uncovering this classical legal culture, Soufi invites readers to question claims about the promise of secular critique in disciplining religious passions and forging human solidarity.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Youcef Soufi is Research Associate at the University of Toronto's Institute of Islamic Studies. He is a former Assistant Professor in Islamic Studies at the University of British Columbia and a former Chair of the Canadian Association for the Study of Islam and Muslims (CASIM). He has held fellowships at the Jackman Humanities Institute at the University of Toronto, the Centre for Comparative Muslim Studies at Simon Frasier University, and The Centre for Studies in Religion and Society (CSRS) at The University of Victoria.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Introduction
Part I
Chapter 1: Mourning Loss Through Debate: Pious Critique and its Limits
Chapter 2: The Emergence of Pious Critique: a Genealogy of "Munazara"
Chapter 3 "Why do We Debate?": Uncovering Two Discursive Foundations for Disputation
Part II
Chapter 4: Debating the Convert's Jizya: How the Madhhab Enabled Ijtihad
Chapter 5: Forced Marriage in Shafi'i Law: Revisiting School Doctrine
Chapter 6: The Case of the Mistaken Prayer Direction: Debating Indeterminate School Doctrine
Part III
Chapter 7: The End of Critical Islam?: Shafi'ism and Temporal Decay
More information with the publisher.
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