SS 101 Course Outline Spring 2014
SS 101 Course Outline Spring 2014
SS 101 Course Outline Spring 2014
Instructor Room No. Office Hours Email Telephone Head TA TA email Course URL Course Basics Credit Hours Lecture(s) Tutorial (per week) Aurangzeb Haneef (course coordinator), Essam Fahim 239 - G Old SS Wing Thurs/Friday 11am 1pm aurangzeb.haneef@lums.edu.pk, essam.fahim@lums.edu.pk +92 42 3560 8092
Duration Duration
Course Distribution Core Open for Student Category COURSE PREREQUISITE(S) None
Yes All
COURSE DESCRIPTION
This short survey course has clearly defined aims. Conversely, this means that it has its limitations too. Its overriding aim is to introduce the student to the academic study of IslamIslam here denoting both a religious system, grounded upon certain normative revealed sources, as well as a civilization unfolding over time as a complex network of cultures shaped by historical contingencies. In other words, it may be called as the study of the Islamic Religious Tradition. The course remains indifferent to the personal beliefs of the students, to any sectarian identity they espouse, and any doctrinal point of view they hold. The course also does not take any sides. It aims to report, as much as possible, what has been discussed within the Islamic religious tradition. We shall begin by contextualizing this course by looking at the traditions of learning and transmission of knowledge in Muslims societies, enabling students to understand the rationale and function of this course at LUMS in a better way. From there we move to the fundamental methodological question: How does one study a given religious system? What are the scholarly tools and conceptual frameworks for exploring a civilization radiating from a religious core? What are the limitations of an academic study of Islam? In what way is it different from the account and conception of the believer or, in the case of cultures, of the actor? In short, how do we approach the study of Islamic religious tradition in the modern world in a university?
From here we move on to a historical overview of the tradition. We look at the doctrinal aspects including the Quran, Hadith, and the life of the Prophet (PBUH). We move to the intellectual aspects exploring the legal/jurisprudential, theological and philosophical developments and discussions in the Muslim experience. Next, we delve into the spiritual realm looking at the mystical tradition of Sufism. We also take up a general study of aesthetics in the context of Islamic literary expressions and material culture, particularly in the realm of literature, art and architecture. The course ends with a discussion of Islam and Muslims in the contemporary world, looking at the post-18 century revivalist, reformist, and modernist movements and connecting it with the 21 century critical issues, such as extremism and violence.
st th
Grading scheme Attendance: 10% Assignment : 20% (Two take-home reflection essays 10% each) Midterm: 30% Final: 40%
Module 1. Teaching Islamic Studies and its Methodological Issues (two lectures) No assigned reading Supplementary Reading: Haneef, Aurangzeb, Education in Muslim Societies: Learning from the Past, in Basit, Abdul, The Global Muslim Community at a Crossroads, 93-112 i. ii. 2. Approaching the Islamic Religion and Civilization (EF) iii. iv. v. Khaki, Jan-e-Alam, 'Muslim' vs 'Islamic' (Dawn) Knight, Michael Muhammad, The Problem with White Converts (VICE) Safi, Omid. Is Islamic Mysticism Really Islam (Huffington Post) Amin, Husnul. Our Textual Religiosity (The News) Dabashi, Hamid, To Protect the Revolution, Overcome the False SecularIslamist Divide (Al Jazeera English)
1.
Module 2. Traditional Texts and Formative History (three lectures) i. 3. The Quran (AH) ii. iii. i. Sirah The Life of Prophet (PBUH) (AH) ii. iii. iv. i. ii. Sonn, Tamara. The Blackwell Companion to Quran, Chapter 1, 3-16 Sells, Michael. Approaching the Quran, Chapter: The Sura of Compassion, An Introduction, 145-157 Esack, Farid. Quran, Liberation & Pluralism, 52-78 Donner, Fred. Muhammad and the Believers, 39-50 Ibn Ishaq. SiraturRasul Allah (Trans. The Life of Muhammad), 231-233 Ramadan, Tariq. The Messenger (The Farewell Pilgrimage), 195-197 Numani, Allama Shibli. Sirat-Un-Nabi (Trans. The Life of the Prophet), 14-25 Al-Shafi`i, Al-Risala, Chapter 5, 109-122 nd Encyclopedia of Islam 2 Edition, Hadith, 23-25, 28-29
4.
5.
Module 3. Islamic Interpretive and Intellectual Tradition (four lectures) i. The Islamic Legal Tradition I (EF) ii. iii. Reinhart, Kevin, Ethics and the Qur'an, Encyclopedia of the Qur'an, Volume 2, 55-79 Abou El Fadl, Khaled, Living in the light of God: Islamic Law and Ethical Obligation (ABC Religion and Ethics) Kamali, Muhammad Hashim, Shari'ah Law: An Introduction, 1-5, 14-27 4
6.
iv.
Ramadan, Tariq, Arab Uprising Must be Accompanied by Spiritual Emancipation (ABC Religion and Ethics) Same as previous session: Islamic Legal Tradition I
7.
8.
ii. i.
9.
Winter, Timothy, aka. Abdal Hakim Murad, The Theology of the Koran Martin, Richard C., Islamic Studies: A History of Religions Approach, 14-17, 106-125 Makdisi, George, The Rise of Humanism in Classical Islam and Christian West, Chapter 1: Humanism in the Organization of Religious Knowledge, 8896, Chapter 2: Relation of Adab to Authority, Hadith and Law, 97-115
Module 5. Islamic Aesthetics and Cultural Expressions (one lecture) i. Aesthetics and Cultural Expressions (guest lecture by Madiha Shaukat) Renard, John, Seven Doors to Islam: Spirituality and the Religious Life of Muslim, "Aesthetics: From Allegory to Arabesque, 108-135 Nasr, Syed Hossein, Islamic Art and Islamic Spirituality, The Relation between Islamic Art and Islamic Spirituality, 3-13
10.
ii.
Module 4. Sufism: The Inner Resolutions (one lecture) i. Sufism; Introduction to Islamic Spirituality (AH) Chittick, William, Sufism: A Beginners Guide, Chapter 1: The Sufi Path, 1-21. ii. Renard, John, Knowledge of God in Classical Sufism, As-Sarraj, Abu Nasr: The Book of Flashes, 65-78 Supplementary Reading: Nasr, Syed Hossein, The Garden of Truth, 163-173
11.
Module 6. Critical Issues in Contemporary Muslim Societies (two lectures) Islam, Modernity, Reform and Revival (guest lecture by Ali Usman Qasmi) Critical Issues; Extremism, Violence, Jihad, Islam and the West (AH) i. Ahmed, Aziz, Islamic Modernism in India and Pakistan 1857-1964, Chapter 5, 103-122 Abou El Fadl, Khaled, The Place of Tolerance in Islam, Chapter 1: The Place of Tolerance in Islam 3-23; Jan, Abidullah: The Limits of Tolerance, 42- 50; Reply, 93-111
12.
i.
13.