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Lives in Adab

Essays in Honour of Julia Bray

Alexander Key, Letizia Osti (Herausgeber)

Buch | Hardcover
496 Seiten
2026
Edinburgh University Press (Verlag)
9781399543132 (ISBN)
CHF 157,00 inkl. MwSt
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Essays and translations by modern-day scholars organised along the principles of the Arabic narrative tradition.
Adab is not an English word, but it could become one. This collection, in honour of Julia Bray, experiments with juxtaposed articles, quotations, translations and lines of poetry to let readers create connections in the same way authors did a thousand years ago in Arabic. The collaboration is inspired by the ongoing work of Julia Bray, which continues to demonstrate the rewards of taking what we read seriously.



The field of Arabic studies is increasingly rejecting a hard line between the modern and the premodern. This book is an intervention in that development – arguing that the premodern can structure contemporary thinking. It offers translations, commentaries and discussions of important and insufficiently known primary texts together with the original Arabic text of poems. These cross-genre and cross-disciplinary connections can catalyse future research and show how a key feature of the Arabic literary tradition is relevant to how we think about scholarship today. The chapters provide readers with both an academic resource and an intellectual conversation with the past.

Alexander Key is Associate Professor of Comparative Literature at Stanford University. He is the author of Language between God and the Poets: Ma‘na in the Eleventh Century (University of California Press, 2018) and is currently working on an under-contract edition and translation of al-Jurjani's Dala'il al-I'jaz for the Library of Arabic Literature. Letizia Osti is Associate Professor in the Department of Languages, Literatures & Cultures at the University of Milan. She is the author/editor of numerous books, including most recently The Historian of Islam at Work: Essays in Honor of Hugh N. Kennedy (co-edited with Maaike van Berkel, Brill, 2022) and History and Memory in the Abbasid Caliphate: Writing the Past in Medieval Arabic Literature (Bloomsbury, 2022).

Transliterations, Translations and Thanks
List of Illustrations

1. Practical adab and the practice of adab
Alexander Key and Letizia Osti

2. Bodily peculiarities and lists in Ibn Qutayba’s Kitab al-maʿarif
Antonella Ghersetti

3. Insects: The Tiniest Creatures in Kalila wa-Dimna
Beatrice Gruendler with Dima Mustafa Sakran and Mahmoud Kozae

4. The absence of Baghdad in the ʿIqd al-farid--Abbasid myth in the making
Isabel Toral

5. Nobility and Prestige (شرف) as Criteria for Inclusion in Anthologies
Bilal W. Orfali and Maurice A. Pomerantz

6. The Novel in Adab: a Modern genre placed in conversation with al-Tanukhi
Alexander Key

7. Al-birka al-husna and the birkas of Samarra
Alastair Northedge

8. Al-Mutanabbi in Tiberias and Shiraz
James E. Montgomery

9. Virtue in Misfortune: al-Buhturi on al-Fath ibn Khaqan’s Fall from a Bridge
Gabrielle Russo

10. Barmakid Benevolence: An Account from Deliverance Follows Adversity
Shawkat M. Toorawa

11. Al-Tanukhi, Storytelling and Adab
Wen-chin Ouyang

12. A text from AR3222
Robert Hoyland

13. Letter to a treacherous lover: love and responsibility in Abbasid romance
Pernilla Myrne

14. Parody and Play, Gender and Genre
Jonny Lawrence

15. Trailing John Greaves’s Timeline
Taha Yasin Arslan, Fyza Parviz Jazra

16. In Search of Intertexts: Literary Imitation, Authorial Lineage and Networked Time in Premodern Arabic Criticism
James White

17. Death in the monastery: visualising emotions, space, and performance in al-Tanukhi
Letizia Osti

18. The flattening of the Arabic lexicon
Michael Cooperson

19. Ibn Taymiyya on Reason, Anger and Desire
Robert Gleave

20. The Emotional Lives of Prophets in al-Kisaʾi’s Qisas al-anbiyaʾ
Helen Blatherwick

21. Remarks on Recognition in Hadith and Akhbar
Philip Kennedy

22. Inspired by Ibn al-Farid? An anonymous mukhammas (مُخَمَّس) featuring St. John of Damascus, St. Peter and the Virgin Mary
Hilary Kilpatrick

23. From Poem to Song: The Artistry of Singer-Composers in Abu l-Faraj al-Isbahani’s Kitab al-Aghani
Dwight F. Reynolds

24. Revisiting The Letter to the Proponents of Freewill (al-Risalah ila l-Qadariyyah) attributed to the Umayyad caliph ʿUmar b. ʿAbd al-ʿAziz (r. 99-101/717-720)
Sean W. Anthony

25. How to be a bad ruler: Miskawayh’s demolition of ʿIzz al-Dawla Bakhtiyar (r. 356/967-367-977)
Hugh Kennedy

26. Al-Tanukhi and the Arabian Adventure Tale
Peter Webb

27. Ibn Rushd on Fraud, Morality and The Law
Joseph E. Lowry

28. You Can Take it with You: Self, Wealth, and Legacy in Arabic Letters
Devin J. Stewart

Julia Bray’s Published Works to Date
Index
Bibliography

Erscheint lt. Verlag 31.3.2026
Reihe/Serie Edinburgh Studies in Classical Arabic Literature
Verlagsort Edinburgh
Sprache englisch
Maße 156 x 234 mm
Themenwelt Literatur Essays / Feuilleton
Literatur Lyrik / Dramatik Lyrik / Gedichte
Geisteswissenschaften Geschichte Regional- / Ländergeschichte
Geisteswissenschaften Sprach- / Literaturwissenschaft Anglistik / Amerikanistik
Geisteswissenschaften Sprach- / Literaturwissenschaft Literaturwissenschaft
ISBN-13 9781399543132 / 9781399543132
Zustand Neuware
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