![]() ![]() In Gender and Muslim Constructions of Exegetical Authority, Aisha Geissinger provides a comprehensive introduction to such quotations, and offers an analysis of their place and significance within the pre-modern genre of Quran commentary, demonstrating that key hermeneutical concepts in classical quranic exegesis (tafsÄ«r) are gendered. (OCLC) A number of classical SunnÄ« Quran commentaries quote several different types of exegetical materials attributed to a few female figures from the first century A.H/seventh century C.E.-Ä thÄ r, á ¥adÄ«ths, legal opinions and variant readings, as well as lines of poetry. In Gender and Muslim Constructions of Exegetical Authority, Aisha Geissinger examines quotations of exegetical materials attributed to female figures in classical SunnÄ« Quran commentaries, and analyses their significance within the pre-modern genre of tafsÄ«r. Pictorial red boards lettered in white, with pink spine label. ![]()
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