BUKHARI

Price: 295.00 INR

We sell our titles through other companies
Disclaimer :You will be redirected to a third party website.The sole responsibility of supplies, condition of the product, availability of stock, date of delivery, mode of payment will be as promised by the said third party only. Prices and specifications may vary from the OUP India site.

ISBN:

9780195676563

Publication date:

08/10/2007

Paperback

154 pages

216x140mm

Price: 295.00 INR

We sell our titles through other companies
Disclaimer :You will be redirected to a third party website.The sole responsibility of supplies, condition of the product, availability of stock, date of delivery, mode of payment will be as promised by the said third party only. Prices and specifications may vary from the OUP India site.

ISBN:

9780195676563

Publication date:

08/10/2007

Paperback

154 pages

Ghassan Abdul-Jabbar

Bukhari (d. 256/870) is famed throughout the Islamic world as the greatest practitioner in the field of hadith—textual reports of what the Prophet said, did, or approved. Bukhari’s magnum opus, the Sahih, is, after the Qur’an, the most widely revered book in Islam. It is a compilation of the soundest of sound hadiths. The Prophet’s way (Sunna) is understood by Muslims as embodying both the ideal and practical reality of what the Qur’an enjoins. Accordingly, much of the edifice of rules and norms of the Islamic way of life is constructed around hadith.

Rights:  World Rights

Ghassan Abdul-Jabbar

Description

Bukhari (d. 256/870) is famed throughout the Islamic world as the greatest practitioner in the field of hadith—textual reports of what the Prophet said, did, or approved. Bukhari’s magnum opus, the Sahih, is, after the Qur’an, the most widely revered book in Islam. It is a compilation of the soundest of sound hadiths. The Prophet’s way (Sunna) is understood by Muslims as embodying both the ideal and practical reality of what the Qur’an enjoins. Accordingly, much of the edifice of rules and norms of the Islamic way of life is constructed around hadith.

Most people read Sahih as a transparent medium through which they can ‘hear’ the Prophet speak. In reality, Bukhari’s work is a highly sophisticated argument about how hadiths are verified, what meaning and authority they carry, and how far the practice of the Prophet can be securely derived from them. When Bukhari wrote Sahih, these were not settled questions. The book appeared at a turning point in the history of Islamic scholarship and helped determine its future direction.

In this remarkably lucid essay addressed to non-specialists, the author disentangles Bukhari’s subtle handling and arrangement of his material, explaining how far his approach to questions about textual authenticity and authority differed from his predecessors and contemporaries. These questions, an abiding concern of all societies, have particular relevance and urgency for modern Islamic scholarship.

About the author

Ghassan Abdul-Jabbar is a specialist in hadith studies. He did his PhD at the University of Chicago, then post-doctoral research at Oxford University. He now works at Lahore University and travels extensively as an Islamic teacher in the classic peripatetic style alluded to in this book.

Ghassan Abdul-Jabbar

Ghassan Abdul-Jabbar

Ghassan Abdul-Jabbar

Ghassan Abdul-Jabbar

Description

Bukhari (d. 256/870) is famed throughout the Islamic world as the greatest practitioner in the field of hadith—textual reports of what the Prophet said, did, or approved. Bukhari’s magnum opus, the Sahih, is, after the Qur’an, the most widely revered book in Islam. It is a compilation of the soundest of sound hadiths. The Prophet’s way (Sunna) is understood by Muslims as embodying both the ideal and practical reality of what the Qur’an enjoins. Accordingly, much of the edifice of rules and norms of the Islamic way of life is constructed around hadith.

Most people read Sahih as a transparent medium through which they can ‘hear’ the Prophet speak. In reality, Bukhari’s work is a highly sophisticated argument about how hadiths are verified, what meaning and authority they carry, and how far the practice of the Prophet can be securely derived from them. When Bukhari wrote Sahih, these were not settled questions. The book appeared at a turning point in the history of Islamic scholarship and helped determine its future direction.

In this remarkably lucid essay addressed to non-specialists, the author disentangles Bukhari’s subtle handling and arrangement of his material, explaining how far his approach to questions about textual authenticity and authority differed from his predecessors and contemporaries. These questions, an abiding concern of all societies, have particular relevance and urgency for modern Islamic scholarship.

About the author

Ghassan Abdul-Jabbar is a specialist in hadith studies. He did his PhD at the University of Chicago, then post-doctoral research at Oxford University. He now works at Lahore University and travels extensively as an Islamic teacher in the classic peripatetic style alluded to in this book.