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Wide-ranging essays on Moroccan history, Sufism, and religious life
Al-Hasan al-Yusi was arguably the most influential and well-known
Moroccan intellectual figure of his generation. In 1084/1685, at
the age of roughly fifty-four, and after a long and distinguished
career, this Amazigh scholar from the Middle Atlas began writing a
collection of short essays on a wide variety of subjects. Completed
three years later and gathered together under the title Discourses
on Language and Literature (al-Muhadarat fi l-adab wa-l-lughah),
they offer rich insight into the varied intellectual interests of
an ambitious and gifted Moroccan scholar, covering subjects as
diverse as genealogy, theology, Sufism, history, and social mores.
In addition to representing the author's intellectual interests,
The Discourses also includes numerous autobiographical anecdotes,
which offer valuable insight into the history of Morocco, including
the transition from the Saadian to the Alaouite dynasty, which
occurred during al-Yusi's lifetime. Translated into English for the
first time, The Discourses offers readers access to the
intellectual landscape of the early modern Muslim world through an
author who speaks openly and frankly about his personal life and
his relationships with his country's rulers, scholars, and
commoners. An English-only edition.
In this beautifully conceived book, Ayesha Ramachandran
reconstructs the imaginative struggles of early modern artists,
philosophers, and writers to make sense of something that we take
for granted: the world, imagined as a whole. Once a new, exciting,
and frightening concept, "the world" was transformed in the
sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. But how could one envision
something that no one had ever seen in its totality? The
Worldmakers moves beyond histories of globalization to explore how
"the world" itself--variously understood as an object of inquiry, a
comprehensive category, and a system of order--was self-consciously
shaped by human agents. Gathering an international cast of
characters, from Dutch cartographers and French philosophers to
Portuguese and English poets, Ramachandran describes a history of
firsts: the first world atlas, the first global epic, the first
modern attempt to develop a systematic natural philosophy--all part
of an effort by early modern thinkers to capture "the world" on the
page.
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