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Interpreting Scriptures in Judaism, Christianity and Islam
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Table of Contents

Introduction: intersecting encounters with scriptures in three faiths Mordechai Z. Cohen; Part I. Scriptural Texts in Changing Contexts: 1. The emergence of biblical interpretation in antiquity James Kugel; 2. Disclosing the mystery: hermeneutics of typology in Syriac exegesis Sidney Griffith; 3. 'We have made it an Arabic Qur'an': the permissibility of translating scripture in Islam in contrast with Judaism and Christianity Meir Bar-Asher; 4. The unmoved mover begins to move: literary and artistic renderings of the Christian Bible Piero Boitani; 5. Deconstructing the dual Torah: a Jewish response to the Muslim model of scripture Meira Polliack; Part II. Conceptions of the Literal Sense: 6. The literal sense of Christian scripture: redefinition and revolution Jon Whitman; 7. Figuring the letter: making sense of 'sensus litteralis' in late-medieval Christian exegesis Alastair Minnis; 8. Conceptions of the literal sense (ẓāhir, ḥaqīqa) in Muslim interpretive thought Robert Gleave; 9. Emergence of the rule of peshat in Jewish Bible exegesis Mordechai Z. Cohen; Part III. Rhetoric and the Poetics of Reading: 10. Reading Virgil, reading David: poetry and commentary in the medieval school of Rheims A. B. Kraebel; 11. On the figurative (majāz) in Muslim interpretation and legal hermeneutics Wolfhart Heinrichs; 12. Words of eloquence: rhetoric and poetics in Jewish peshat exegesis in its Muslim and Christian contexts Mordechai Z. Cohen; 13. Classical rhetoric and scriptural interpretation in the Latin West Rita Copeland; 14. Robert Lowth's biblical poetics and Romantic theory Stephen Prickett; 15. From scripture to literature: modern ways of reading the Bible Adele Berlin.

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This comparative study examines how scriptures - the Bible and the Qur'an - were interpreted in Judaism, Christianity, and Islam throughout history.

About the Author

Mordechai Z. Cohen is Professor of Bible and Associate Dean of the Bernard Revel Graduate School of Jewish Studies at Yeshiva University. His publications include Three Approaches to Biblical Metaphor: From Abraham Ibn Ezra and Maimonides to David Kimhi and Opening the Gates of Interpretation: Maimonides' Biblical Hermeneutics in Light of his Geonic-Andalusian Heritage and Muslim Milieu. Adele Berlin is Robert H. Smith Professor of Hebrew Bible Emerita in the Department of English and the Jewish Studies Program at the University of Maryland. She is the author of seven books, including Poetics and Interpretation of Biblical Narrative, The Dynamics of Biblical Parallelism, and commentaries on Zephaniah, Esther, and Lamentations.

Reviews

'This volume brings together an excellent collection of essays that will prove useful for scholars in many fields including hermeneutics, medieval religious thought, the history of biblical interpretation, and the history of the three Abrahamic religions. The two outstanding qualities of the volume are the various chapters on Islamic interpretive tradition and the four chapters comprising part 2s on the sensus literalis. In the case of this first strength, the chapters dealing with issues within the Islamic interpretive tradition go a long way in both introducing this important vein of scriptural interpretation to the interested reader and showing in a compelling manner the various points of contact between Islamic interpreters and those from Judaism and Christianity. In the second instance, part 2 of this volume represents one of the best treatments of the sensus literalis available to an academic readership. For these reasons, this volume deserves much attention.' Stephen D. Campbell, Journal of Hebrew Scriptures

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