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The Making of a Da'wa: Muhammad b. 'Abd al-Wahhab between Poesy and Scripture
Abstract by Nadav Samin On Session 065  (Islamic Theologies and Ideologies)

On Friday, November 15 at 10:15 am

2019 Annual Meeting

Abstract
Three out of four of the Najdi revivalist Muhammad Ibn 'Abd al-Wahhab’s key theological epistles are written in a popular register. They possess the oral recitative and/or minimalistic qualities associated with popular religiosity and even Arabian vernacular poetry. Other of his minor theological texts are similarly clipped and spare, suggestive of pamphlets or mnemonic aids. Through a methodologically new treatment of these epistles, I argue that the Wahhabism of the mid-eighteenth century represents the transference of the Arabian oral tradition to the legal and theological realm, in application to a newly emergent sedentary society; that Ibn 'Abd al-Wahhab’s revivalist mission reflects a taming of poesy, to mean oral communicative styles, by a scriptural tradition, and the adoption of the former’s assumptions for converting a largely preliterate people. The central artifacts of this confrontation, I suggest, can be found embedded in Ibn 'Abd al-Wahhab’s popular epistles.
Discipline
History
Geographic Area
Arabian Peninsula
Sub Area
13th-18th Centuries