“Le Lingue Islamiche: Forty Years Later.” Special issue, Eurasian Studies 18 (1), 2020. (original) (raw)

What is an Islamic language? A review essay

Zeitschrift für Arabische Linguistik , 2022

What is an Islamic language? A review essay of: SIMONA OLIVIERI, GIULIANO LANCIONI AND MICHELE BERNARDINI (eds.), Eurasian Studies 18, 2020. “Special Issue: Le Lingue Islamiche: Forty years later”. Leiden: Brill.

Kees Versteegh, The Arabic Language, Edinburgh, Edinburgh University Press, 2014, in Muslim World Book Review, Vol 35, no 4, 2015, pp. 29-31.

This is a review of the updated version of a classic which first appeared in 2000. It illustrates the history and characteristics of the two varieties of the Arabic language, namely, the standard type (fuṣḥā), and the vernacular/colloquial (‘āmiya/dārija) in their synchronic and diachronic continuum.

Language and Linguistics as Historical Evidence in the Islamic World: A Preliminary Case Study of Culture and Identity in Eurasia

Using sociolinguistic techniques to look at the use of language within the multi-linguistic Islamicate cultural space could provide important insights into the role of culture and identity in the history the Islamic world and the emphasis (or de-emphasis) on cultural, ethnic or national difference. The linguistic history of the Turkic nationalities of the Russian Empire and Soviet Union provide an interesting case study for this (admittedly preliminary) methodological framework. Summarizing the sociolinguistic history of language in the Turkic Islamic world, this paper then looks at two main stances towards language which appeared in the 19th and early 20th centuries among these groups (notably the Volga Tatars): Qayyum Nasyri's (1825Nasyri's ( -1902 attempts to fabricate a modernized Tatar literary language and Ismail Gasprinski's (1851Gasprinski's ( -1914 efforts at a unified pan-Turkic literary language. These approaches touch upon issues of identity, modernism, pan-Islamism, pan-Turkism, nationalism and cultural assimilation, as well as questions of education and the Islamic scholarly tradition, and competed simultaneously within the same discursive space, where issues of language and its uses were at the forefront.

The Culture of Islam: Changing Aspects of Contemporary Muslim Life

International Journal of Middle East Studies, XXXVI(3):501-503., 2004

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Review of 'Behnam Sadeghi, Asad Q Ahmed, Adam Silverstein and Robert Hoyland (eds.) Islamic Cultures, Islamic Contexts: Essays in Honor of Professor Patricia Crone, Leiden: Brill, 2015. 631 pp. ISBN 9789004252011 (HBK)'

Review of 'Behnam Sadeghi, Asad Q Ahmed, Adam Silverstein and Robert Hoyland (eds.) Islamic Cultures, Islamic Contexts: Essays in Honor of Professor Patricia Crone, Leiden: Brill, 2015. 631 pp. ISBN 9789004252011 (HBK)'.