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Gorgias's Modern Muslim World

This series covers all fields of inquiry—sociocultural, political, legal, religious, scientific, and literary—that concern Muslims across the world during the nineteenth to the twenty-first century. Monographs and edited volumes are welcome; dissertations must be thoroughly revised before submission. The preferred language of the series is English.

Series Editors

Nelly van Doorn-Harder and Joas Wagemakers

Advisory Board

Khaled M. Abou El Fadl         Marcia Hermansen

Marwa Elshakry                     Ebrahim Moosa

Mary Beinecke Elston            Aslı Niyazioğlu

To submit a book proposal to the series, please contact submissions@gorgiaspress.com

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Picture of Bethlehem's Syriac Christians

Bethlehem's Syriac Christians

Self, nation and church in dialogue and practice
ISBN: 978-1-4632-0637-6
An anthropological study of Syriac Orthodox Christian identity in a time of displacement, upheaval, and conflict. For some Syriac Orthodox Christians in Bethlehem, their self-articulation - the means by which they connect themselves to others, things, places and symbols - is decisively influenced by their eucharistic ritual. This ritual connects being siryāni to a redeemed community or 'body', and derives its identity in large part from the Incarnation of God as an Aramaic-speaking Bethlehemite.
$162.00 (USD)
Picture of Ottoman Architecture

Ottoman Architecture

A Study Published for the 1873 Vienna World’s Fair
ISBN: 978-1-4632-4170-4
Ottoman Architecture is the first modern history of Ottoman architecture written by Ottomans themselves, yet it is little known outside the field of late Ottoman studies. This magnificently-illustrated volume codifies the empire’s architectural history into a series of preliminary stages culminating in the efflorescence of the Ottoman classical tradition in the sixteenth-century.
$131.00 (USD) $104.80 (USD)
Picture of Islam before Modernity

Islam before Modernity

Aḥmad al-Dardīr and the Preservation of Traditional Knowledge
ISBN: 978-1-4632-4380-7
This book examines the role of tradition and discursive knowledge transmission on the formation of the ‘ulamā’, the learned scholarly class in Islam, and their approach to the articulation of the Islamic disciplines. This book argues that a useful framework for evaluating the intellectual contributions of post-classical scholars such as Aḥmad ibn Muḥammad al-Dardīr involves preserving, upholding, and maintaining the Islamic tradition, including the intellectual “sub-traditions” that came to define it.
$130.00 (USD)