"Let books be your dining table, / And you shall be full of delights. / Let them be your
mattress,/
And you shall sleep restful nights" (St. Ephraim the Syrian).


Tuesday, April 24, 2012

The Coming of Islam

Gorgias Press continues to bring out old works of historical scholarship no longer in print, and works from and about deceased authors. One of its recent such offerings is a collection about the work of John Wansbrough, an historian at the University of London who died in 2002.

In The Coming of the Comforter: When, Where, and to Whom?, Studies on the Rise of Islam and Various Other Topics in Memory of John Wansbrough, a posthumous Festschrift edited by Carlos Segovia and Basil Lourié. 


About this book the publisher tells us:
John Wansbrough is famous for his pioneering studies on the "sectarian milieu" out of which Islam emerged. In his view, Islam grew out of different - albeit rather marginal - Jewish and Christian traditions whose intertwinings deserve being studied. In the present volume, which is dedicated to Wansbrough's memory, specialists in Islamic studies and students of the Jewish and early Christian traditions out of which Islam presumably arose summarise Wansbrough's achievements in the past thirty years. The volume also goes a step further by setting forth new landmarks for the study of the traditions implied in Wansbrough's aforementioned concept of the "sectarian milieu" from which Islam emerged, perhaps later than is commonly assumed and in a rather unclear, even ambiguous way.
You may peruse the table of contents here

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