Scripture as Literature: The Bible, the Qurān, and Amad Fāris al-Shidyāq

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24 janvier 2025

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  • 10938/25871
  • 2-s2.0-85064354849
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Ce document est lié à :
Journal of Arabic Literature




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Issa, « Scripture as Literature: The Bible, the Qurān, and Amad Fāris al-Shidyāq », American University of Beirut ScholarWorks


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This article explores Amad Fāris al-Shidyāq's treatment of Christian and Islamic dogma in his linguistic and literary works, al-Sāq alā al-sāq fī mā huwa al-Fāryāq and Mumāakāt al-tawīl fī munāqaāt al-injīl, among others. A convert to Islam, al-Shidyāq is a notorious critic of Christian doctrine and scripture. I draw parallels with his Bible critique to show how he thwarts the Qurān's stronghold on the Arabic language. Borrowing from Mutazilah doctrines, al-Shidyāq proposes that language is a human creation - and meaning a human relation - and blames Arabic philologists for conflating language with submission to the divine. Through the technique of iqtibās, al-Shidyāq perforates the scriptural authority of the Bible and the Qurān by treating them as literary texts. Al-Shidyāq underscores the scriptures as products of the human, and not the divine, mind. His parodic play with iqtibās underscores literary rigor against authoritative discourse. Al-Shidyāq provides us with exquisite examples of how radicalness may be diffused, asserted, curtailed and covered up through word choice as well as conditions of book production, to affect a critique of authority that would long outlast his time. © 2019 by Koninklijke Brill NV, Leiden, The Netherlands.

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