The Jews of Islam: Updated EditionPrinceton University Press, 28 בספט׳ 2014 - 272 עמודים This landmark book probes Muslims' attitudes toward Jews and Judaism as a special case of their view of other religious minorities in predominantly Muslim societies. With authority, sympathy and wit, Bernard Lewis demolishes two competing stereotypes: the Islamophobic picture of the fanatical Muslim warrior, sword in one hand and Qur'ān in the other, and the overly romanticized depiction of Muslim societies as interfaith utopias. |
מתוך הספר
תוצאות 6-10 מתוך 88
... Christian anti-Semitism. Muslim repression was based in part on what we might call a “rational” fear that dhimmĩs might act in collusion with the external enemy. Christian persecution of Jews in medieval Europe (in modern times as well) ...
... Christian tradition.” Lewis also employs Goitein's term, “symbiosis,” to highlight the reciprocal influence of the two cultures. His discussion of possible Jewish or Christian influences on the founder of Islam is tempered with a ...
... Christian anti-Semitism to the Muslim world, proliferates, though the perpetrators are typically Christian, not Muslim. Increasingly, the story features Western governments intervening in these territories in defense of fellow Christians ...
... Christians and Muslims alike, tolerance is a new virtue, intolerance a new crime. For the greater part of the history of both communities, tolerance was not valued nor was intolerance condemned. Until comparatively modern times, Christian ...
... Christianity of the Emperor Constantine and the bishops from the Christianity of Christ—or, we might add, as different ... Christian art” is limited to devotional and ecclesiastical art and would certainly not be extended to include art ...
תוכן
3 | |
TWO The JudaeoIslamic Tradition | 71 |
THREE The Late Medieval and Early Modern Periods | 107 |
FOUR The End of the Tradition | 154 |
NOTES | 193 |
INDEX | 227 |