Aristotle’s Rhetoric in the East

The Late Antique Aristotelian tradition inherited by the world of early Islam in the Near East considered the Rhetoric an integral part of one’s training in logic and reasoning. Thus far, however, there has been little academic interest in it, apart from Deborah Black’s ground-breaking monograph pu...

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Autor principal: Sajjad H. Rizvi
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Lenguaje:EN
Publicado: International Institute of Islamic Thought 2010
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spelling oai:doaj.org-article:e3ba8664e9f54149a4f55e46348568e52021-12-02T19:41:22ZAristotle’s Rhetoric in the East10.35632/ajis.v27i2.13342690-37332690-3741https://doaj.org/article/e3ba8664e9f54149a4f55e46348568e52010-04-01T00:00:00Zhttps://www.ajis.org/index.php/ajiss/article/view/1334https://doaj.org/toc/2690-3733https://doaj.org/toc/2690-3741 The Late Antique Aristotelian tradition inherited by the world of early Islam in the Near East considered the Rhetoric an integral part of one’s training in logic and reasoning. Thus far, however, there has been little academic interest in it, apart from Deborah Black’s ground-breaking monograph published some two decades ago and the recent edition in Maroun Aouad’s translation and study of Ibn Rushd’s commentary on it. Vagelpohl’s revised Cambridge dissertation is a careful historical and linguistic study of its translation and naturalization in Syriac (less so) and Arabic learned culture in the Near East. As such, he considers the text a case study that raises wider questions about the whole process of the translation movement that, after a relative absence of interest, is again inspiring a new vogue of academic literature. Since translation is a process of cultural exchange, it is important to pay attention to details and formulations. The choice of the Rhetoric requires some justification, as Vagelpohl admits, for two reasons: (a) the Aristotelian text was not that significant in antiquity; more practical manuals were more widely used and taught, and (b) the Arabic tradition distinguished between two traditions of rhetoric, an indigenous genre of balaghah (and bayan) that drew upon classics of the Arabic language and was essential for training preachers and functionaries, and a more philosophical and Hellenizing khitabah represented by the Aristotelian text and its commentary, such as the one by Ibn Rushd. Clearly the former tradition dominated, for even a cursory examination of the manuscript traditions and texts in libraries attests to this imbalance. However, Vagelpohl argues that the challenges posed by the text reveal strategies and approaches used by the translators to deal with the cultural exchange that may assist our understanding of the wider translation movement ... Sajjad H. RizviInternational Institute of Islamic ThoughtarticleIslamBP1-253ENAmerican Journal of Islam and Society, Vol 27, Iss 2 (2010)
institution DOAJ
collection DOAJ
language EN
topic Islam
BP1-253
spellingShingle Islam
BP1-253
Sajjad H. Rizvi
Aristotle’s Rhetoric in the East
description The Late Antique Aristotelian tradition inherited by the world of early Islam in the Near East considered the Rhetoric an integral part of one’s training in logic and reasoning. Thus far, however, there has been little academic interest in it, apart from Deborah Black’s ground-breaking monograph published some two decades ago and the recent edition in Maroun Aouad’s translation and study of Ibn Rushd’s commentary on it. Vagelpohl’s revised Cambridge dissertation is a careful historical and linguistic study of its translation and naturalization in Syriac (less so) and Arabic learned culture in the Near East. As such, he considers the text a case study that raises wider questions about the whole process of the translation movement that, after a relative absence of interest, is again inspiring a new vogue of academic literature. Since translation is a process of cultural exchange, it is important to pay attention to details and formulations. The choice of the Rhetoric requires some justification, as Vagelpohl admits, for two reasons: (a) the Aristotelian text was not that significant in antiquity; more practical manuals were more widely used and taught, and (b) the Arabic tradition distinguished between two traditions of rhetoric, an indigenous genre of balaghah (and bayan) that drew upon classics of the Arabic language and was essential for training preachers and functionaries, and a more philosophical and Hellenizing khitabah represented by the Aristotelian text and its commentary, such as the one by Ibn Rushd. Clearly the former tradition dominated, for even a cursory examination of the manuscript traditions and texts in libraries attests to this imbalance. However, Vagelpohl argues that the challenges posed by the text reveal strategies and approaches used by the translators to deal with the cultural exchange that may assist our understanding of the wider translation movement ...
format article
author Sajjad H. Rizvi
author_facet Sajjad H. Rizvi
author_sort Sajjad H. Rizvi
title Aristotle’s Rhetoric in the East
title_short Aristotle’s Rhetoric in the East
title_full Aristotle’s Rhetoric in the East
title_fullStr Aristotle’s Rhetoric in the East
title_full_unstemmed Aristotle’s Rhetoric in the East
title_sort aristotle’s rhetoric in the east
publisher International Institute of Islamic Thought
publishDate 2010
url https://doaj.org/article/e3ba8664e9f54149a4f55e46348568e5
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