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Excellence and Precedence: Medieval Islamic Discourse on Legitimate Leadership by Asma Afsaruddin — book cover

Excellence and Precedence: Medieval Islamic Discourse on Legitimate Leadership

by Asma Afsaruddin
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Overview

This volume focuses on how legitimate leadership came to be defined in the formative period of Islam in terms of two key Qur'anic concepts: moral excellence (fadūl/fadūīla) and precedence (sābiqa). These two concepts undergirded a specific discourse on leadership which developed in the first century of Islam. This discourse is reconstructed through careful scrutiny of the manāqib literature in particular, which contains detailed accounts of the excellences attributed to the Rāshidūn caliphs. This book stresses that all early factions, including the proto-Shī‘a, subscribed to the Qur'ānically-mandated vision of a righteous polity guided by its most morally excellent members. Such a conclusion forces us to rethink the nature of leadership in the earliest period and reconsider the criteria invoked to establish its legitimacy.

Synopsis

This volume focuses on how legitimate leadership came to be defined in the formative period of Islam in terms of two key Qur'anic concepts: moral excellence (faḍl/faḍīla) and precedence (sābiqa). These two concepts undergirded a specific discourse on leadership which developed in the first century of Islam. This discourse is reconstructed through careful scrutiny of the manāqib literature in particular, which contains detailed accounts of the excellences attributed to the Rāshidūn caliphs. This book stresses that all early factions, including the proto-Shī'a, subscribed to the Qur'ānically-mandated vision of a righteous polity guided by its most morally excellent members. Such a conclusion forces us to rethink the nature of leadership in the earliest period and reconsider the criteria invoked to establish its legitimacy.

About the Author, Asma Afsaruddin

Asma Afsaruddin, Ph.D. (1993) in Near Eastern Studies, the Johns Hopkins University, is Assistant Professor of Arabic and Islamic Studies at the University of Notre Dame. She recently edited Hermeneutics and Honor: Negotiating Female "Public" Space in Islamic/ate Societies (Cambridge, Mass., 1999).

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Editorials

Booknews

What chiefly divides Sunni and Shi'i Islam is the kinship vs. moral excellence debate over assumption of leadership upon the Prophet Muhammad's death. Afsaruddin (Arabic and Islamic studies, U. of Notre Dame) redresses the neglect of Al-Jahiz (d. circa 1274 A.D.), the Shi'i author of the , and his contribution to the literature, i.e., writings extolling the qualities of the Prophet's companions in their bid for leadership. By comparing his views with a refutation by Ibn Tawus, she explains how such arguments relied on the Qur'anic concepts of moral excellence (fadl/fadila) and precedence (sabiqa). Based on a 1993 doctoral dissertation in Near Eastern studies at the Johns Hopkins U. Annotation c. Book News, Inc., Portland, OR (booknews.com)

Book Details

Published
February 20, 2002
Publisher
Brill
Pages
312
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9789004120433

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