The Kharijites in Early Islamic Historical Tradition
Heroes and Villains
Format:Paperback
Publisher:Edinburgh University Press
Published:24th Feb '23
Should be back in stock very soon
Analyses the narrative function of Kh?rijism in 9th- and 10th-century Islamic historiography The first book-length literary study of Kh?rijism Sheds new light on the creation of historical memory in early Islamic historiography Emphasises the importance of literary approaches to early Islamic history Calls for a reassessment of historical Kh?rijism based on the findings of this literary analysis Why are stories told about the Kh?rijites purported rebels and heretics? From the Kh?rijites' origins at the Battle of ?iff?n in 657 CE until the death of the caliph ?Abd al-Malik b. Marw?n in 705 CE, this exhaustive literary analysis provides a fresh perspective on Kh?rijite history as depicted in early Islamic historiography. The Islamic tradition portrays Kh?rijism as a heretical movement of militantly pious zealots, a notion largely reiterated by what little modern scholarship there is on the Kh?rijites. Hannah-Lena Hagemann moves away from the usual positivist reconstructions of Kh?rijite history 'as it really was' and instead examines its narrative function in early Islamic historiography. The results of this literary analysis highlight the need for a serious reassessment of the historical phenomenon of Kh?rijism as it is currently understood in scholarship.
"The Kharijites in Early Islamic Historical Tradition is a welcome addition to the scholarship on early Islamic history, Islamic historiography, the Islamic literary tradition, and Islamic sects and sectarianism. Hagemann provides a comprehensive, historicized analysis of how Muslim historians in the first few centuries of Islamic history understood the Kharijites and Kharijism and, as importantly, how and why they developed and their views and disseminated them." -Christopher Anzalone, George Mason University
ISBN: 9781474450898
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: unknown
316 pages