Japheth ben Ali's Book of Jeremiah

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A01=Joshua A. Sabih
Arabic
Arabic Commentary
Arabic Diglossia
Arabic Language
Arabic Script
Arabic script manuscripts
Arabic Translation
Arabo Islamic Culture
Author_Joshua A. Sabih
biblical hermeneutics theory
Book of Jeremiah
Category=NHC
Category=QRM
Category=QRVC
Classical Arabic
diglossia in Judaism
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eq_history
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eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
Final Short Vowels
Hebrew Biblical Text
Hebrew philology
Hebrew Scripts
Hebrew Text
Holy Tongue
Ibn Khaldun
Japheth ben Ali's Biblical text
Jewish Languages
Judaeo-Arabic Bible translation analysis
Karaite scholarship
Literary System
Literary Varieties
Matres Lectionis
medieval Jewish linguistics
medieval Karaite-Jewish-literary system
Middle Arabic
Modern Arabic Dialects
Modern Standard Arabic
Mood Endings
NLR
Polysystem Theory
Saadia Gaon
Socio-cultural Function

Product details

  • ISBN 9781845533380
  • Weight: 1110g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 15 Jun 2009
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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This volume deals with three themes: medieval Judaism, Arabic and Hebrew sociolinguistics, and Arabic Bible translation. Within Medieval Judaism, the Karaite Jews became a prosperous community under the banners of Islam. One of the most salient signs of the Karaite community's strength and internal cohesion was the extensive scientific contribution that it made to the fields of Biblical studies, Hebrew philology and philosophy. This book presents for the first time a critical edition of one of the works of the leading Karaite scholars in biblical exegeses and translation, Japheth ben Ali's Judaeo-Arabic translation of the "Book of Jeremiah", drawing on five medieval manuscripts. As the majority of Karaite works, including Bible manuscripts, are in Judaeo-Arabic, relatively few of them have been published. A number of the Karaite Bible manuscripts were written in Arabic script, resulting in their being neglected by scholars, despite the significance of these manuscripts to the history of medieval Judaism and Bible textual Studies. The author of this volume focuses on some of the most important issues in the field of sociolinguistics, namely language-contact, diglossia and the status of both Arabic and Hebrew in the medieval Jewish literary system. Equally important is the issue of the script-in-use (Hebrew or Arabic), which was a major subject of debate among the Rabbinates and the Karaites. Indeed, the language and the script used in these manuscripts will help us re-evaluate the established theories about the language-situation and literary systems in medieval Islamic and Jewish societies. The value of translating the Hebrew Bible into Arabic was unparalleled in medieval inter-religious scholarship. For Muslim scholars it was their only access to the Jewish Bible. The contribution of the Karaites to this field is enormous, and this work offers us a unique window into the Karaite theory of Biblical hermeneutics.

Joshua A. Sabih is a Moroccan-Danish scholar. He is lecturer in Jewish, Islamic Studies and Semitic Philology at the Carsten Niebuhr Department of Middle Eastern Studies, TORS Institute, University of Copenhagen.

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