Nouvelle revue (Brill) et nouvelle « book series » (Routledge)
Islamic Intellectual Traditions / Islam and Process-Relational Thought

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Nouvelle revue: Islamic Intellectual Traditions (Brill/Tokat Institute)
Islamic Intellectual Traditions is an Open Access journal devoted to research on Islam’s variegated intellectual perspectives, schools, and figures encompassing a wide geographical and temporal expanse. It welcomes articles in the form of analytical studies, critical editions, and translations of texts that cover fields such as philosophy, theology, mysticism, scriptural exegesis, legal theory, literature, anthropology, and sociology on the one hand, and their intertwining worlds on the other. The journal also publishes reviews of the latest and most significant books on its subject matter.
Islamic Intellectual Traditions is a Diamond Open Access journal sponsored by the Tokat Institute for Advanced Islamic Studies
-Editor-in-Chief: Mohammed Rustom
-Editors: Muhammad U. Faruque, Kazuyo Murata, Cyrus Ali Zargar
-Book Review Editor: John Zaleski
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Nouvelle « book series » : Islam and Process-Relational Thought (Routledge, Taylor and Francis)
This groundbreaking book series explores the untapped intellectual frontier where Islamic tradition meets process and open-relational thought. By bringing together scholars from Islamic studies and process philosophy/theology, the series investigates profound connections between these traditions that emphasize relationality, becoming, and the dynamic interplay between God, world, and humanity.
While process-relational thought has been extensively explored in Christian and Jewish contexts, its engagement with Islamic theology, mysticism, philosophy, and ethics remains largely undeveloped. This series addresses this crucial gap, offering fresh perspectives on divine action, free will, environmental ethics, feminism, and political thought within Islamic frameworks.
Volumes will examine diverse themes including Qur’anic hermeneutics through process-relational thought lenses, Islamic theology in dialogue with process theism, comparative studies of Islamic philosophers like Ibn Sina and Mulla Sadra with Whitehead and Hartshorne, Sufi mysticism’s resonance with process thought, and Islamic approaches to environmental ethics and religious pluralism.
Designed for scholars and advanced students in Islamic studies, philosophy, theology, and comparative religion, this series represents a significant scholarly contribution that opens new pathways for understanding God, cosmos, and human existence while enriching both Islamic thought and process-relational philosophy for contemporary challenges.
⇒Link: https://www.routledge.com/Islam-and-Process-Relational-Thought/book-series/IPRT