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Overview
In his probing study of the role of death rites in the making of Islamic society, Leor Halevi imaginatively plays prescriptive texts against material culture and advances new ways of interpreting highly contested sources. His original research reveals that religious scholars of the early Islamic period produced codes of funerary law not only to define the handling of a Muslim corpse but also to transform everyday urban practices. Relying on oral traditions, these scholars established new social patterns in the cities of Arabia, Mesopotamia, and the eastern Mediterranean. They distinguished Islamic rites from Christian, Jewish, and Zoroastrian rites and changed the way men and women interacted publicly and privately.In each chapter Halevi explores a different layer of human interaction, following the movement of the corpse from the deathbed to the grave. In the process he analyzes the real and imaginary relationships between husbands and wives, prayer leaders and mourners, and even dreamers and the dead. He describes how Muslims wailed for the deceased, prepared corpses for burial, marched in funerary processions, and prayed for the dead, highlighting the specific economic and political factors involved in these rituals as well as key religious and sexual divisions.
Offering a unique perspective on the making of Islamic social and religious ideals during this early period, Halevi forges a fascinating link between the development of funerary rites and the efforts of an emerging religion to carve out its own, distinct identity. Muhammad's Grave is a groundbreaking history of the rise of Islam and the roots of contemporary Muslim attitudes toward the body and society.
Editorials
Albert Hourani Book Award Committee
"[A] signal contribution.... Exceptionally rich in its documentation and evidentiary record, highly imaginative, and creative in its use of oral traditions and legal rulings, Muhammad's Grave is a seminal work.
Journal of the Economic and Social History of the Orient
Innovative... A welcome addition to undergraduate and graduate curricula, and an important source book for scholars.β Kathryn Kueny
American Anthropologist
A welcome contribution... Muhammad's Grave does more than fill the gap.β Ian Straughn
Times Literary Supplement
A truly impressive display of textual scholarship fused with historical anthropology and lit up by enthusiasm.β Barnaby Rogerson
Speculum
The definitive history of its subject before modern times.
al-Qantara
Halevi's book is highly recommended
Middle East Quarterly
A masterful, well-written work filled with original research.
International Journal of Middle East Studies
Will be highly valued by anyone who works on early Islam and the process through which a distinctively Islamic community came about.β Martyn Smith
Islamic Law and Society
A much-needed corrective to the abstract and textual nature of much of the debate over the nature of early Islam, plunging the reader into a thoroughly imagined and painstakingly documented material world.... Erudite and engaging.β Marion Katz
Journal of World History
An important contribution to our understanding of the crafting of social ritual in early Islamic society.β Christine D. Baker
American Historical Review
A scholarly gem... a spectacular accomplishment.β Khalid Yahya Blankinship
Journal of the American Academy of Religion
All of this is exciting stuff for students of the early Muslim world, in part because Halevi has suggested and demonstrated several possible ways forward in a notoriously unyielding filed of inquiry.β Thomas Sizgorich
Review of Middle East Studies
Original and highly readable.... Halevi showcases what historians of Islam can accomplish.
Religion and the Arts
Leor Halevi's Muhammad's Grave is a strikingly original work built on a foundation of meticulous and wide-ranging scholarship.
Mesa Romes
[O]riginal and highly readable study
History Workshop Journal
Impressive erudition, which includes a thorough familiarity with scholarship on Judaism and Christianity as well as Islam.
Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies
Matchless imagination in relating the traditions and events of the past.
Everett K. Rowson
Muhammad's Grave will be warmly welcomed by scholars and students of premodern Islam, including specialists in both history and religion, and will attract the attention of European medievalists and anthropologists as well. The topic is important, the scholarship solid and original, and the presentation elegant and lucid.
Muhammad Qasim Zaman
The most exhaustive study yet on matters relating to death in early Islam. Leor Halevi meticulously demonstrates how particular beliefs and practices evolved, what sorts of contestation took place in debating these matters, how these beliefs and practices varied from one Islamic city (or community of scholars) to another, what larger questions of identity and authority were at stake, and how to interpret the literary remains that describe the beliefs and practices in question. A major contribution to our understanding of early Islamic history, Islamic religious thought, and the formation of Islam during its first centuries.
Gerald Hawting
Leor Halevi persuasively argues that the development of Islamic practices and beliefs relating to death, burial, and the fate of the body was a relatively extended process crucial to the eighth century. He considers a wide range of issues, including matters of sexual propriety and the restriction of the social space available to women, and the way in which a body of rituals served to create an Islamic identity.
Journal of the Economic and Social History of the Orient
Innovative... A welcome addition to undergraduate and graduate curricula, and an important source book for scholars.
American Anthropologist
A welcome contribution... Muhammad's Grave does more than fill the gap.
Times Literary Supplement
A truly impressive display of textual scholarship fused with historical anthropology and lit up by enthusiasm.
International Journal of Middle East Studies
Will be highly valued by anyone who works on early Islam and the process through which a distinctively Islamic community came about.
Islamic Law and Society
A much-needed corrective to the abstract and textual nature of much of the debate over the nature of early Islam, plunging the reader into a thoroughly imagined and painstakingly documented material world.... Erudite and engaging.
Journal of World History
An important contribution to our understanding of the crafting of social ritual in early Islamic society.
American Historical Review
A scholarly gem... a spectacular accomplishment.
Journal of the American Academy of Religion
All of this is exciting stuff for students of the early Muslim world, in part because Halevi has suggested and demonstrated several possible ways forward in a notoriously unyielding filed of inquiry.