The ‘Īsā Narrative in the Qur’an: The Making of a Prophet

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingBook chapterResearchpeer-review

Standard

The ‘Īsā Narrative in the Qur’an : The Making of a Prophet. / Sabih, Joshua.

‘Is This Not the Carpenter?’ The Question of the Historicity of the Figure of Jesus. Taylor and Francis/Routledge, 2017. p. 217-232.

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingBook chapterResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Sabih, J 2017, The ‘Īsā Narrative in the Qur’an: The Making of a Prophet. in ‘Is This Not the Carpenter?’ The Question of the Historicity of the Figure of Jesus. Taylor and Francis/Routledge, pp. 217-232. https://doi.org/10.4324/9781315539225-21

APA

Sabih, J. (2017). The ‘Īsā Narrative in the Qur’an: The Making of a Prophet. In ‘Is This Not the Carpenter?’ The Question of the Historicity of the Figure of Jesus (pp. 217-232). Taylor and Francis/Routledge. https://doi.org/10.4324/9781315539225-21

Vancouver

Sabih J. The ‘Īsā Narrative in the Qur’an: The Making of a Prophet. In ‘Is This Not the Carpenter?’ The Question of the Historicity of the Figure of Jesus. Taylor and Francis/Routledge. 2017. p. 217-232 https://doi.org/10.4324/9781315539225-21

Author

Sabih, Joshua. / The ‘Īsā Narrative in the Qur’an : The Making of a Prophet. ‘Is This Not the Carpenter?’ The Question of the Historicity of the Figure of Jesus. Taylor and Francis/Routledge, 2017. pp. 217-232

Bibtex

@inbook{9b7edac6f5ab4960b7fa859baaa79ef3,
title = "The {\textquoteleft}Īsā Narrative in the Qur{\textquoteright}an: The Making of a Prophet",
abstract = "The Qur{\textquoteright}anic (Q) discourse about the {\textquoteleft}Īsā (عيسى) figure-taken to be identical to the New Testament{\textquoteright}s (NT) Jesus by most scholars-reveals many salient features, some of which refer to, not borrow from, NT narratives as mock narratives, not as source narratives. While the term {\textquoteleft}narrative{\textquoteright} is used here in the sense it is by Susana Onega and Jos{\'e} Angel Garcia Landa:1 {\textquoteleft}A narrative is the semiotic representation of a series of events meaningfully connected{\textquoteright}, mock narrative/text, refers to the other(s) narrative(s)/text(s) as implied narrative(s)/text(s) by the Qur{\textquoteright}anic narrative. Mock narrative/ text represents the counterpart of the Qur{\textquoteright}anic narrative/text, functioning as its second narrative/text. I coined this term, on the basis of the term {\textquoteleft}mock reader{\textquoteright} that Walker Gibson coined in 1950.2 In a communicative situation, this mock narrative/text presupposes an implied reader, who engages in the reading process from the outside into the inside of the (Qur{\textquoteright}anic) text. Both the implied reader and the mock narrative/text are abstractions, but unlike the implied reader, mock narrative/text can actually be heard and seen in the text. Mock narrative/text is intended by the concrete narrative/ text, and as such it occupies an intermediate position between the concrete text/narrative, Qur{\textquoteright}an-and the non-Qur{\textquoteright}anic texts/sources/narrativesQur{\textquoteright}an commentaries, midrashic literature, NT tradition, pre-Islamic oral traditions and so forth.3",
author = "Joshua Sabih",
note = "Publisher Copyright: {\textcopyright} Thomas L. Thompson and Thomas S. Verenna 2012. Individual contributions and the contributors. All rights reserved.",
year = "2017",
month = jan,
day = "1",
doi = "10.4324/9781315539225-21",
language = "English",
isbn = "9781845539863",
pages = "217--232",
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RIS

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T2 - The Making of a Prophet

AU - Sabih, Joshua

N1 - Publisher Copyright: © Thomas L. Thompson and Thomas S. Verenna 2012. Individual contributions and the contributors. All rights reserved.

PY - 2017/1/1

Y1 - 2017/1/1

N2 - The Qur’anic (Q) discourse about the ‘Īsā (عيسى) figure-taken to be identical to the New Testament’s (NT) Jesus by most scholars-reveals many salient features, some of which refer to, not borrow from, NT narratives as mock narratives, not as source narratives. While the term ‘narrative’ is used here in the sense it is by Susana Onega and José Angel Garcia Landa:1 ‘A narrative is the semiotic representation of a series of events meaningfully connected’, mock narrative/text, refers to the other(s) narrative(s)/text(s) as implied narrative(s)/text(s) by the Qur’anic narrative. Mock narrative/ text represents the counterpart of the Qur’anic narrative/text, functioning as its second narrative/text. I coined this term, on the basis of the term ‘mock reader’ that Walker Gibson coined in 1950.2 In a communicative situation, this mock narrative/text presupposes an implied reader, who engages in the reading process from the outside into the inside of the (Qur’anic) text. Both the implied reader and the mock narrative/text are abstractions, but unlike the implied reader, mock narrative/text can actually be heard and seen in the text. Mock narrative/text is intended by the concrete narrative/ text, and as such it occupies an intermediate position between the concrete text/narrative, Qur’an-and the non-Qur’anic texts/sources/narrativesQur’an commentaries, midrashic literature, NT tradition, pre-Islamic oral traditions and so forth.3

AB - The Qur’anic (Q) discourse about the ‘Īsā (عيسى) figure-taken to be identical to the New Testament’s (NT) Jesus by most scholars-reveals many salient features, some of which refer to, not borrow from, NT narratives as mock narratives, not as source narratives. While the term ‘narrative’ is used here in the sense it is by Susana Onega and José Angel Garcia Landa:1 ‘A narrative is the semiotic representation of a series of events meaningfully connected’, mock narrative/text, refers to the other(s) narrative(s)/text(s) as implied narrative(s)/text(s) by the Qur’anic narrative. Mock narrative/ text represents the counterpart of the Qur’anic narrative/text, functioning as its second narrative/text. I coined this term, on the basis of the term ‘mock reader’ that Walker Gibson coined in 1950.2 In a communicative situation, this mock narrative/text presupposes an implied reader, who engages in the reading process from the outside into the inside of the (Qur’anic) text. Both the implied reader and the mock narrative/text are abstractions, but unlike the implied reader, mock narrative/text can actually be heard and seen in the text. Mock narrative/text is intended by the concrete narrative/ text, and as such it occupies an intermediate position between the concrete text/narrative, Qur’an-and the non-Qur’anic texts/sources/narrativesQur’an commentaries, midrashic literature, NT tradition, pre-Islamic oral traditions and so forth.3

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AN - SCOPUS:85152845482

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BT - ‘Is This Not the Carpenter?’ The Question of the Historicity of the Figure of Jesus

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