Русские видео

Сейчас в тренде

Иностранные видео


Скачать с ютуб Friday 7 July 2023 - PANEL DISCUSSION: THE LIFE OF WILFERD MADELUNG в хорошем качестве

Friday 7 July 2023 - PANEL DISCUSSION: THE LIFE OF WILFERD MADELUNG Трансляция закончилась 1 год назад


Если кнопки скачивания не загрузились НАЖМИТЕ ЗДЕСЬ или обновите страницу
Если возникают проблемы со скачиванием, пожалуйста напишите в поддержку по адресу внизу страницы.
Спасибо за использование сервиса savevideohd.ru



Friday 7 July 2023 - PANEL DISCUSSION: THE LIFE OF WILFERD MADELUNG

EVENT DETAILS Join us as we welcome Dr Kumail Rajani and Professor Sajjad Rizvi as we hold a panel discussion on the life of the late Wilferd Madelung (d. 9th May 2023) This programme will be face to face and streamed online. We will be streaming the programme live on our YouTube channel:    / sicmtv   If you would like to recite Qur’an during the programme, please do let us know: email us: [email protected] SPEAKER Kumail Rajani Kumail Rajani is a Postdoctoral Research Fellow in Islamic Studies at the Institute of Arab and Islamic Studies, University of Exeter. He works on the Law, Authority and Learning in Shiite Islam project, an advanced award (no. 695245) funded by European Research Council. Though primarily focused on the origins and development of hadith corpora, his research includes Islamic law, legal theory, and Shiʿi studies more broadly. He recently published an article entitled “Between Qum and Qayrawān: Unearthing early Shii ḥadīth sources” (BSOAS 84/3, 2021). He also edited The Sound Traditions: Studies in Ismaili Texts and Thought (Brill, 2021) and co-edited Shiʿite Legal Theory: Sources and Commentaries (forthcoming, 2022). He is currently working on converting his PhD (Making Sense of Ismaili Traditions: The Modes and Meanings of the Transmission of Ḥadīth in the Works of al-Qāḍī al-Nuʿmān (d. 363/974), Exeter) into a monograph, among other pursuits. Rajani spent a number of years in Shiʿite seminary (Ḥawza) of Qum studying and teaching classical Islamic texts of ḥadīth, fiqh and Islamic legal theory. Rajani is the recipient of Post Doctoral Writing Fellowship from British Institute for Libyan and Northern African Studies for one year (2022) as well as British Academy Postdoctoral Fellowship for 3 years (2023-2025). Sajjad Rizvi Professor Rizvi is an intellectual historian who is interested in the course of philosophy in the Islamic world both past and present. Increasingly he is interested in how that study and category of philosophy coincides with the emergent category of global philosophy. In terms of method, his research is informed by the need for a decolonial and reparative study of Islam. He supervises graduate students broadly in Islamic intellectual history, especially in philosophy, theology and Quranic exegesis. He is the director of the Centre for the Study of Islam. He works on Islamic intellectual history in the wider Persianate world. His particular interests which grew from his PhD at Cambridge on the philosophy of Mullā Ṣadrā Shīrāzī (d. c. 1636) lie in post-Avicennan philosophical, theological and mystical traditions. His second main area of interest is Qurʾanic exegesis and textual hermeneutics. He is currently interested in three projects: completing an intellectual history of philosophical traditions in Iran and North India in the 18th century, a diachronic study of the philosophy of time in Islamic thought, and the reception of some European philosophies in the postcolonial Muslim context. On this last project, he has embarked on a seed project with case studies of Turkey, Iraq, Iran, and Pakistan supported by the European Network Fund. With a former student and colleague Ahab Bdaiwi, he is editing the Oxford Handbook of Shiʿi Islam, as well as an exciting new series of translations of Islamic intellectual traditions for Hackett Publishing. He has advised various government departments and private sector concerns on Iraq, Iran, Shiʿi Islam in the Gulf, and Islam in Britain and Europe. He also run a blog that has his various musings on philosophy both Islamic and otherwise as well as notes on manuscript research and related critical editions. The blog entitled Hikmat is available here. He tweets under the name @mullasadra

Comments