The little-known story of the sophisticated and vibrant Arabic book culture that flourished during the Middle Ages. During the thirteenth century, Europe’s largest library owned fewer than 2,000 volumes. Libraries in the Arab world at the time had exponentially larger collections. Five libraries in Baghdad alone held between 200,000 and 1,000,000 books each, including multiple copies of standard works so that their many patrons could enjoy simultaneous access. How did the Arabic codex become so popular during the Middle Ages, even as the well-established form languished in Europe? Beatrice Gruendler’s The Rise of the Arabic Book answers this question through in-depth stories of bookmakers and book collectors, stationers and librarians, scholars and poets of the ninth century. The history of the book has been written with an outsize focus on Europe. The role books played in shaping the great literary cultures of the world beyond the West has been less known—until now. An internationally renowned expert in classical Arabic literature, Gruendler corrects this oversight and takes us into the rich literary milieu of early Arabic letters.
Amid booms and crashes, serialized Arabic fiction and finance at once tell the other’s story.
239–44 Poole, Reginald Lane, A Lecture on the History of the University Archives (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1912) Posner, Ernst, 'The Effect of Changes in Sovereignty on Archives', American Archivist, 5 (1942), pp.
A detailed account of this tradition is given by Sheila Deane, Bardic Style in the Poetry of Gerard Manley Hopkins, W. B. Yeats and Dylan Thomas (Ann Arbor: UMI Research Press, 1989). Walt Whitman, Leaves of Grass, read by Ed Begley, ...
There is a big leap from, “I'm of to find us a mammoth for lunch” to “Daddy said: 'I'm of to find us a mammoth for lunch.'” In the latter statement, the speaker is retrospectively repeating someone else's words, rather than speaking ...
Rather as in an Agatha Christie novel, where it is invariably the suspect with the most ornate alibi who proves to be the murderer, so similarly, in the field of hadith studies, it turned out that there was no surer mark of fraud or ...
It is the converse of the state of affairs in the individualist 'West' today, where institutional religion has nose-dived, but where many individuals keep up a deep spirituality. The sociologist Grace Davie has described their condition ...
This is the first translation of a classic work (Bahth fi nnsh' at 'ilm al ta' rikh 'inda l-'Arab) by the eminent Arab historian A. A. Duri.
In February 1958, Eqypt and Syria decided to unite, announcing the formation of the United Arab Republic (UAR). The union collapsed in September 1961, following a military coup in Syria....
This book reveals that the time-honoured stereotypes which depict Arabs as ancient Arabian Bedouin are entirely misleading because the essence of Arab identity was in fact devised by Muslims during the first centuries of Islam.
This volume provides an authoritative survey of creative writing in Arabic from the mid-nineteenth century to the present day.