Séminaire: « On the historical usefulness of ‘Muslim-Christian Relations’ category », par C.Bori, 4-5 février, MMSH, Aix-en-Provence
Dans le cadre du "Master en Études islamologiques", séminaire Approches plurielles des études islamologiques (amU/IFI/Amidex /Iremam/CNRS)
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Dans le cadre du Master en Études islamologiques et tradition intellectuelle en islam et de son séminaire « Approches plurielles des études islamologiques », soutenu par amU/IFI/Amidex /Iremam/CNRS, la MMSH d’Aix-en-Provence (5 Rue Château de l’Horloge, 13090) recevra la professeure d’études islamiques Caterina BORI, du département d’Histoire de l’Université de Bologne les 4 et 5 février prochain (salle PAF le 4 février, de 15h30-18h30, et le 5 février de 9h30-12h30 puis de 14h30 à 16h30).
Le séminaire dépend en outre du projet de recherche TAMAM, dirigé par Olga L. LIZZINI (AMU). Il sera donné en anglais.
“On the historical usefulness of ‘Muslim-Christian Relations’ as an analytical category: case studies from Medieval Muslim history (1200-1400 DC)”, par Caterina BORI (Université de Bologne)
Through the examination of some case studies, this series of seminars will challenge the category of ‘Muslim-Christian relations’ as an ever-useful analytical paradigm for understanding the diversity and multiplicity of interactions between historical actors of different religious affiliations in the Islamic Mediterranean between the 13th and 15th centuries. The approach will be interactive. Students are expected to engage with the course-materials, work in groups and take part in discussions. Intellectual generosity will be highly valued. A syllabus will be distributed at due time.
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Caterina Bori is a historian of the Islamic, Arabic-speaking Middle East in its Medieval period (1000-1500 AD), particularly of the Mamluk domains and its religious culture. She devoted much of her research to the study of the controversial Ḥanbalī scholar, Taqī al-Dīn Aḥmad ibn Taymiyya and his student Ibn Qayyim al-Jawziyya. Her research explores questions about their memory, the circle of people who followed them, and the early modern reception of their work and thought. Recently, she has developed an interest in manuscript culture, which she has combined with her Taymiyyan studies with the aim of applying it to other fields of investigation too.