Title | The Origin of Tripartite Division of Speech in Semitic Grammar (Continued) |
Type | Article |
Language | English |
Date | 1963 |
Journal | The Jewish Quarterly Review |
Volume | 54 |
Issue | 2 |
Pages | 132-160 |
Categories | Aristotle, Poetics, Transmission |
Author(s) | J. B. Fischer |
Publisher(s) | |
Translator(s) |
Online Access | https://www.jstor.org/stable/1453569 |
DOI | https://doi.org/10.2307/1453569 |
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Title | The Origin of Tripartite Division of Speech in Semitic Grammar: I |
Type | Article |
Language | English |
Date | 1962 |
Journal | The Jewish Quarterly Review |
Volume | 53 |
Issue | 1 |
Pages | 1-21 |
Categories | Poetics, Rhetoric, Tradition and Reception |
Author(s) | J. B. Fischer |
Publisher(s) | |
Translator(s) |
Online Access | https://www.jstor.org/stable/1453419 |
DOI | https://doi.org/10.2307/1453419 |
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Online Access | https://www.jstor.org/stable/470561 |
DOI | https://doi.org/10.2307/470561 |
{"_index":"bib","_type":"_doc","_id":"5663","_score":null,"_source":{"id":5663,"authors_free":[{"id":6568,"entry_id":5663,"agent_type":"person","is_normalised":1,"person_id":903,"institution_id":null,"role":{"id":1,"role_name":"author"},"free_name":"Edwin J. Webber","free_first_name":"Edwin J. ","free_last_name":"Webber","norm_person":{"id":903,"first_name":"","last_name":"","full_name":"","short_ident":"","is_classical_name":0,"dnb_url":"","viaf_url":"","db_url":"","from_claudius":1,"link":"bib?authors[]="}}],"entry_title":"Comedy as Satire in Hispano-Arabic Spain","title_transcript":"","title_translation":"","main_title":{"title":"Comedy as Satire in Hispano-Arabic Spain"},"abstract":"","btype":3,"date":"1958","language":"English","online_url":"https:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/470561","doi_url":"https:\/\/doi.org\/10.2307\/470561","ti_url":"","categories":[{"id":44,"category_name":"Poetics","link":"bib?categories[]=Poetics"},{"id":18,"category_name":"Surveys","link":"bib?categories[]=Surveys"}],"authors":[{"id":903,"full_name":"","role":1}],"works":[],"republication_of":null,"translation_of":null,"new_edition_of":null,"book":null,"booksection":null,"article":{"id":5663,"journal_id":null,"journal_name":"Hispanic Review","volume":"26","issue":"1","pages":"1-11"}},"sort":[1958]}
Title | Prophecy Between Poetics and Politics from Al-Farabi to Leo Strauss |
Type | Article |
Language | English |
Journal | International Journal of the Classical Tradition |
Pages | 1-29 |
Categories | al-Fārābī, Avicenna, Maimonides, Aristotle, Poetics, Rhetoric, Politics, Tradition and Reception |
Author(s) | Peter Makhlouf |
Publisher(s) | |
Translator(s) |
Judaeo-Arabic prophetology, as developed in the wake of Platonic and Aristotelian philosophy, was highly attentive to the kind of representational modes produced by divine revelation and their political use—but also their political precarity. By drawing on another corpus, less often discussed in this context, the Arabic commentaries on Aristotle's Poetics and Rhetoric, this study proposes to undertake a close analysis of how the medieval thinkers in question (Al-Farabi, Avicenna, Averroes, and Maimonides) understood the poetics of prophecy to function. What emerges is an account of how the political theo-logic of poetics and rhetoric—as developed with respect to terms such as imitation, imagination and visualization—came to play a central role in the theory of prophecy, and how that theory of prophecy in turn gave rise to an understanding of what Leo Strauss once termed the ‘literary character’ of these philosophers' ‘art of writing’. |
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Online Access | https://www.jstor.org/stable/470561 |
DOI | https://doi.org/10.2307/470561 |
{"_index":"bib","_type":"_doc","_id":"5663","_score":null,"_source":{"id":5663,"authors_free":[{"id":6568,"entry_id":5663,"agent_type":"person","is_normalised":1,"person_id":903,"institution_id":null,"role":{"id":1,"role_name":"author"},"free_name":"Edwin J. Webber","free_first_name":"Edwin J. ","free_last_name":"Webber","norm_person":{"id":903,"first_name":"","last_name":"","full_name":"","short_ident":"","is_classical_name":0,"dnb_url":"","viaf_url":"","db_url":"","from_claudius":1,"link":"bib?authors[]="}}],"entry_title":"Comedy as Satire in Hispano-Arabic Spain","title_transcript":"","title_translation":"","main_title":{"title":"Comedy as Satire in Hispano-Arabic Spain"},"abstract":"","btype":3,"date":"1958","language":"English","online_url":"https:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/470561","doi_url":"https:\/\/doi.org\/10.2307\/470561","ti_url":"","categories":[{"id":44,"category_name":"Poetics","link":"bib?categories[]=Poetics"},{"id":18,"category_name":"Surveys","link":"bib?categories[]=Surveys"}],"authors":[{"id":903,"full_name":"","role":1}],"works":[],"republication_of":null,"translation_of":null,"new_edition_of":null,"book":null,"booksection":null,"article":{"id":5663,"journal_id":null,"journal_name":"Hispanic Review","volume":"26","issue":"1","pages":"1-11"}},"sort":["Comedy as Satire in Hispano-Arabic Spain"]}
Title | Prophecy Between Poetics and Politics from Al-Farabi to Leo Strauss |
Type | Article |
Language | English |
Journal | International Journal of the Classical Tradition |
Pages | 1-29 |
Categories | al-Fārābī, Avicenna, Maimonides, Aristotle, Poetics, Rhetoric, Politics, Tradition and Reception |
Author(s) | Peter Makhlouf |
Publisher(s) | |
Translator(s) |
Judaeo-Arabic prophetology, as developed in the wake of Platonic and Aristotelian philosophy, was highly attentive to the kind of representational modes produced by divine revelation and their political use—but also their political precarity. By drawing on another corpus, less often discussed in this context, the Arabic commentaries on Aristotle's Poetics and Rhetoric, this study proposes to undertake a close analysis of how the medieval thinkers in question (Al-Farabi, Avicenna, Averroes, and Maimonides) understood the poetics of prophecy to function. What emerges is an account of how the political theo-logic of poetics and rhetoric—as developed with respect to terms such as imitation, imagination and visualization—came to play a central role in the theory of prophecy, and how that theory of prophecy in turn gave rise to an understanding of what Leo Strauss once termed the ‘literary character’ of these philosophers' ‘art of writing’. |
{"_index":"bib","_type":"_doc","_id":"5615","_score":null,"_source":{"id":5615,"authors_free":[{"id":6518,"entry_id":5615,"agent_type":"person","is_normalised":null,"person_id":903,"institution_id":null,"role":{"id":1,"role_name":"author"},"free_name":"Peter Makhlouf","free_first_name":"Peter ","free_last_name":"Makhlouf","norm_person":{"id":903,"first_name":"","last_name":"","full_name":"","short_ident":"","is_classical_name":0,"dnb_url":"","viaf_url":"","db_url":"","from_claudius":1,"link":"bib?authors[]="}}],"entry_title":"Prophecy Between Poetics and Politics from Al-Farabi to Leo Strauss","title_transcript":"","title_translation":"","main_title":{"title":"Prophecy Between Poetics and Politics from Al-Farabi to Leo Strauss"},"abstract":"Judaeo-Arabic prophetology, as developed in the wake of Platonic and Aristotelian philosophy, was highly attentive to the kind of representational modes produced by divine revelation and their political use\u2014but also their political precarity. By drawing on another corpus, less often discussed in this context, the Arabic commentaries on Aristotle's Poetics and Rhetoric, this study proposes to undertake a close analysis of how the medieval thinkers in question (Al-Farabi, Avicenna, Averroes, and Maimonides) understood the poetics of prophecy to function. What emerges is an account of how the political theo-logic of poetics and rhetoric\u2014as developed with respect to terms such as imitation, imagination and visualization\u2014came to play a central role in the theory of prophecy, and how that theory of prophecy in turn gave rise to an understanding of what Leo Strauss once termed the \u2018literary character\u2019 of these philosophers' \u2018art of writing\u2019.","btype":3,"date":"","language":"English","online_url":"","doi_url":"https:\/\/doi.org\/10.1007\/s12138-022-00632-8","ti_url":"","categories":[{"id":28,"category_name":"al-F\u0101r\u0101b\u012b","link":"bib?categories[]=al-F\u0101r\u0101b\u012b"},{"id":10,"category_name":"Avicenna","link":"bib?categories[]=Avicenna"},{"id":9,"category_name":"Maimonides","link":"bib?categories[]=Maimonides"},{"id":21,"category_name":"Aristotle","link":"bib?categories[]=Aristotle"},{"id":44,"category_name":"Poetics","link":"bib?categories[]=Poetics"},{"id":48,"category_name":"Rhetoric","link":"bib?categories[]=Rhetoric"},{"id":4,"category_name":"Politics","link":"bib?categories[]=Politics"},{"id":43,"category_name":"Tradition and Reception","link":"bib?categories[]=Tradition and Reception"}],"authors":[{"id":903,"full_name":"","role":1}],"works":[],"republication_of":null,"translation_of":null,"new_edition_of":null,"book":null,"booksection":null,"article":{"id":5615,"journal_id":null,"journal_name":"International Journal of the Classical Tradition","volume":"","issue":"","pages":"1-29"}},"sort":["Prophecy Between Poetics and Politics from Al-Farabi to Leo Strauss"]}
Title | The Origin of Tripartite Division of Speech in Semitic Grammar (Continued) |
Type | Article |
Language | English |
Date | 1963 |
Journal | The Jewish Quarterly Review |
Volume | 54 |
Issue | 2 |
Pages | 132-160 |
Categories | Aristotle, Poetics, Transmission |
Author(s) | J. B. Fischer |
Publisher(s) | |
Translator(s) |
Online Access | https://www.jstor.org/stable/1453569 |
DOI | https://doi.org/10.2307/1453569 |
{"_index":"bib","_type":"_doc","_id":"5675","_score":null,"_source":{"id":5675,"authors_free":[{"id":6579,"entry_id":5675,"agent_type":"person","is_normalised":1,"person_id":903,"institution_id":null,"role":{"id":1,"role_name":"author"},"free_name":"J. B. Fischer","free_first_name":"J. B. ","free_last_name":"Fischer","norm_person":{"id":903,"first_name":"","last_name":"","full_name":"","short_ident":"","is_classical_name":0,"dnb_url":"","viaf_url":"","db_url":"","from_claudius":1,"link":"bib?authors[]="}}],"entry_title":"The Origin of Tripartite Division of Speech in Semitic Grammar (Continued)","title_transcript":"","title_translation":"","main_title":{"title":"The Origin of Tripartite Division of Speech in Semitic Grammar (Continued)"},"abstract":"","btype":3,"date":"1963","language":"English","online_url":"https:\/\/www.jstor.org\/stable\/1453569","doi_url":"https:\/\/doi.org\/10.2307\/1453569","ti_url":"","categories":[{"id":21,"category_name":"Aristotle","link":"bib?categories[]=Aristotle"},{"id":44,"category_name":"Poetics","link":"bib?categories[]=Poetics"},{"id":40,"category_name":"Transmission","link":"bib?categories[]=Transmission"}],"authors":[{"id":903,"full_name":"","role":1}],"works":[],"republication_of":null,"translation_of":null,"new_edition_of":null,"book":null,"booksection":null,"article":{"id":5675,"journal_id":null,"journal_name":"The Jewish Quarterly Review","volume":"54","issue":"2","pages":" 132-160"}},"sort":["The Origin of Tripartite Division of Speech in Semitic Grammar (Continued)"]}
Title | The Origin of Tripartite Division of Speech in Semitic Grammar: I |
Type | Article |
Language | English |
Date | 1962 |
Journal | The Jewish Quarterly Review |
Volume | 53 |
Issue | 1 |
Pages | 1-21 |
Categories | Poetics, Rhetoric, Tradition and Reception |
Author(s) | J. B. Fischer |
Publisher(s) | |
Translator(s) |
Online Access | https://www.jstor.org/stable/1453419 |
DOI | https://doi.org/10.2307/1453419 |
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