Description

Book Synopsis
The history of the book has overwhelmingly focused on Europe. But during the Middle Ages, a crucial period of its development, the book was far more popular among speakers of Arabic. Beatrice Gruendler corrects this scholarly oversight, exploring the material resources that underlay the rich world of Medieval Arabic letters.

Trade Review
[A] superb history of the creation of the Arabic book in the ninth century…Gruendler is a leading authority on Classical Arabic literature of the early period and her chosen excerpts are both astute and illuminating—and often unexpectedly amusing (and sometimes downright scurrilous)…A major work of scholarship which is also a delight to read. -- Eric Ormsby * Literary Review *
A persuasive, in-depth, and insightful study of an important part of media history that is often overlooked…It will be of use for scholars and students of Arabic, other languages of Islamic culture, and research on the early development of book culture around the world. -- Jocelyn Sharlet * Journal of Arabic Literature *
An exciting and original look at the subject of Abbasid book production from one of the leading authorities on classical Arabic literature. Gruendler brings to life the role of the stationers as book makers and book sellers, humble craftsmen usually overlooked by historians, whose labors enabled Arabic book culture to flourish. This fascinating work inaugurates a new way of looking at the subject. -- Hugh Kennedy, author of Caliphate: The History of an Idea
A window into the vibrant intellectual history of the classical Arabic book, from the pen of an eminent scholar of Abbasid belles lettres. -- Tahera Qutbuddin, author of Arabic Oration: Art and Function
Beatrice Gruendler expertly plumbs classical and medieval Arabic sources to tell the fascinating story of how authors and autodidacts, book addicts and book doubters, poets and papermakers, and scholars and stationers of ninth-century Baghdad—the city of a hundred bookshops—contributed to the phenomenal rise of the Arabic book. This volume is destined to be indispensable for all who are interested in the global history of the book. -- Shawkat M. Toorawa, Professor of Arabic, Yale University
The breathtaking book revolution that took hold of the Arabic Near East from the ninth century CE onward led to an explosive growth in manuscripts, libraries, and all forms of written culture. In this extraordinary new book, Beatrice Gruendler traces the rise of the Arabic codex, bringing into focus not only the fascinating material objects themselves but also the people who made and used them. After reading this wide-ranging and deeply erudite work, no one who studies the history of the book and of global humanities in general will be able to ignore the Arabic contribution. -- Glenn W. Most, coeditor of The Classical Tradition

The Rise of the Arabic Book

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    A Hardback by Beatrice Gruendler

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      View other formats and editions of The Rise of the Arabic Book by Beatrice Gruendler

      Publisher: Harvard University Press
      Publication Date: 01/10/2020
      ISBN13: 9780674987814, 978-0674987814
      ISBN10: 0674987810

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      The history of the book has overwhelmingly focused on Europe. But during the Middle Ages, a crucial period of its development, the book was far more popular among speakers of Arabic. Beatrice Gruendler corrects this scholarly oversight, exploring the material resources that underlay the rich world of Medieval Arabic letters.

      Trade Review
      [A] superb history of the creation of the Arabic book in the ninth century…Gruendler is a leading authority on Classical Arabic literature of the early period and her chosen excerpts are both astute and illuminating—and often unexpectedly amusing (and sometimes downright scurrilous)…A major work of scholarship which is also a delight to read. -- Eric Ormsby * Literary Review *
      A persuasive, in-depth, and insightful study of an important part of media history that is often overlooked…It will be of use for scholars and students of Arabic, other languages of Islamic culture, and research on the early development of book culture around the world. -- Jocelyn Sharlet * Journal of Arabic Literature *
      An exciting and original look at the subject of Abbasid book production from one of the leading authorities on classical Arabic literature. Gruendler brings to life the role of the stationers as book makers and book sellers, humble craftsmen usually overlooked by historians, whose labors enabled Arabic book culture to flourish. This fascinating work inaugurates a new way of looking at the subject. -- Hugh Kennedy, author of Caliphate: The History of an Idea
      A window into the vibrant intellectual history of the classical Arabic book, from the pen of an eminent scholar of Abbasid belles lettres. -- Tahera Qutbuddin, author of Arabic Oration: Art and Function
      Beatrice Gruendler expertly plumbs classical and medieval Arabic sources to tell the fascinating story of how authors and autodidacts, book addicts and book doubters, poets and papermakers, and scholars and stationers of ninth-century Baghdad—the city of a hundred bookshops—contributed to the phenomenal rise of the Arabic book. This volume is destined to be indispensable for all who are interested in the global history of the book. -- Shawkat M. Toorawa, Professor of Arabic, Yale University
      The breathtaking book revolution that took hold of the Arabic Near East from the ninth century CE onward led to an explosive growth in manuscripts, libraries, and all forms of written culture. In this extraordinary new book, Beatrice Gruendler traces the rise of the Arabic codex, bringing into focus not only the fascinating material objects themselves but also the people who made and used them. After reading this wide-ranging and deeply erudite work, no one who studies the history of the book and of global humanities in general will be able to ignore the Arabic contribution. -- Glenn W. Most, coeditor of The Classical Tradition

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