REVIEW OF QUR’ANIC RESEARCH

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Welcome to the Review of Qur’anic Research (RQR), an online companion to theLog In Here International Qur’anic Studies Association (IQSA). IQSA is committed to the advancement and dissemination of high quality scholarship on the Qur’an and to the facilitation of deeper understandings of the Qur’an through scholarly collaboration. RQR is an online resource that features reviews of cutting-edge scholarship in the field of qur’anic studies and allied fields. Members must log in to view reviews in their entirety.

Reviewers: Our editorial board solicits reviews from appropriate academic reviewers for each volume reviewed. RQR editors request that reviewers write their review in a timely manner (usually 90 days) and in accordance with best scholarly practices. Authors who wish to submit their own reviews for consideration are considered on a case by case basis.

Submissions: While RQR acts mainly as a clearinghouse for the review of new scholarly publications (monographs, translations, edited texts, reference works, etc.), published works of cultural and religious significance that fall outside the traditional domain of academic publication may also be reviewed. Publishers and authors who wish to submit their publications for review in RQR should contact the RQR editor Shari Lowin (Stonehill College) at slowin@stonehill.edu.

Editor:

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Shari Lowin is Professor of Religious Studies and Program Director of Middle Eastern Studies at Stonehill College, Massachusetts. In 2002, Lowin completed her Ph.D in Department of Near Eastern Languages and Civilizations at University of Chicago. Her research centers on the interplay between Judaism and Islam in the early and early medieval Islamic periods, c. 800-1200 CE, focusing mainly on the development of Jewish and Muslim exegetical narratives. Of her most recent publications is Arabic and Hebrew Love Poems of al-Andalus (Routledge, 2013), which examines Arabic and Hebrew eros poetry (`ishq/shirat esheq poems) of religious scholars in 10th-13th century Muslim Spain. Other works include comparative studies of Judaism and Islam focused on the narratives of Abraham and on accounts of enemies of God in the midrash aggadah and in the adīth, including a monograph entitled The Making of a Forefather: Abraham in Islamic and Jewish Exegetical Narratives (Brill, 2006).

All inquiries can be directed to the RQR editor, Shari Lowin (Stonehill College) at slowin@stonehill.edu.

Access to complete RQR documents is available to IQSA members only. Login for full access to the Review of Qur’anic Research online. Not a member? Click here to register for full access to RQR.

New reviews in Review of Qurʾanic Research, vol. 8 (2022):

  1. Saqib Hussain (University of Oxford) on Martin Whittingham, A History of Muslim Views of the Bible: The First Four Centuries (Berlin: de Gruyter, 2021).
  2. Ana Davitashvili (Eberhard-Karls-Universität Tübingen), reviews Joachim Jakob’s Syrisches Christentum und früher Islam: Theologische Reaktionen in syrisch-sprachigen Texten vom 7. bis 9. Jahrhundert (Innsburck: Tyrolia-Verlag, 2021).
  3. Devin J. Stewart (Emory University) on George Archer, A Place Between Two Places: The Qurʾānic Barzakh (Piscataway, NJ: Gorgias, 2017).
  4. Holger Zellentin (University of Tübingen) on Simon P. Loynes, Revelation in the Qur’an: A Semantic Study of the Roots n-z-l and wḥ-y (Leiden: Brilll, 2021).
  5. Joseph E. Lowry (University of Pennsylvania) on Marianna Klar (Ed.), Structural Dividers in the Qur’an (Abingdon: Routledge, 2021).

     

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