Qur'an between the Ottoman Empire and the Turkish Republic

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A01=Susan Gunasti
Abul Ala Maududi
Ahmed Hamdi
Ankara Government
Author_Susan Gunasti
Category=QRPF1
Category=QRVC
Early Republican Period
Early Republican Turkey
early twentieth-century Turkish Qur'an commentary
Elmalili Hamdi Yazir
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eq_isMigrated=2
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Exegetical Practice
Exegetical Translation
Histoire De La Philosophie
Interpretive Translation
Islamic intellectual history
Islamic Intellectual Tradition
Istanbul religious scholarship
Late Ottoman
Late Ottoman Empire
Late Ottoman Period
Mehmed Efendi
Mehmet Emin
modernist Islamic thought
Muslim Intellectuals
Muslim World
Mustafa Kemal
Ottoman Intellectual
Ottoman Turkish
Ottoman Turkish Translation
Public Engagement
Religious Affairs
tafsir studies
Turkish Language Association
Turkish religious reform
Young Man

Product details

  • ISBN 9780367671716
  • Weight: 453g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 18 Dec 2020
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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The Qur’an between the Ottoman Empire and the Turkish Republic is one of the few book-length studies on an Ottoman Qur’an commentary. Its premise is that "the Ottoman Empire" did not come to an end until 1950 so far as Islam was concerned in Turkey.

The work explores the relationship between Elmalılı’s Qur’an commentary and the intellectual trends of the period, including the impact of materialism, the sciences, notions of civilizational progress, and philosophy. In doing so, this study emphasizes the "local" aspect of the Qur’an commentary, through a sustained focus on the Istanbul context in which it was written. This work demonstrates that Elmalılı’s Qur’an commentary is a product of and reaction to the religious, intellectual, political, and social trends of the period. This work, in considering all the factors that led to the commissioning of Elmalılı’s Qur’an commentary, also contributes to our understanding of the history of Islam in early to mid-twentieth-century Turkey.

This intellectual history of modern Islamic thought contributes to our understanding of the genre of Qur’an commentary in the early twentieth century. It is a key text for students and scholars interested in Islam in the Ottoman Empire and Turkey, modern Islamic thought, and the Middle East.

Susan Gunasti is an associate professor of religion at Ohio Wesleyan University. She obtained her doctorate from Princeton University from the Department of Religion. Her research interests are Qur’an commentary, Islam in the Ottoman Empire, and Islamic political thought.

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