Rhetorical Studies in America. The Place of Averroës and the Medieval Arab Commentators, 1996
By: Mark Schaub
Title Rhetorical Studies in America. The Place of Averroës and the Medieval Arab Commentators
Type Article
Language English
Date 1996
Journal Alif. Journal of Comparative Poetics
Volume 16
Pages 233–253
Categories Rhetoric, Commentary
Author(s) Mark Schaub
Publisher(s)
Translator(s)

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Rhetoric and Islamic Political Philosophy, 1972
By: Charles E. Butterworth
Title Rhetoric and Islamic Political Philosophy
Type Article
Language English
Date 1972
Journal International Journal of Middle East Studies
Volume 3
Issue 2
Pages 187-198
Categories Rhetoric, Politics, Commentary
Author(s) Charles E. Butterworth
Publisher(s)
Translator(s)

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The Medieval Subjugation and the Existential Elevation of Rhetoric, 1972
By: Craig Smith
Title The Medieval Subjugation and the Existential Elevation of Rhetoric
Type Article
Language English
Date 1972
Journal Philosophy & Rhetoric
Volume 5
Issue 3
Pages 159-174
Categories Rhetoric, Aristotle, Logic
Author(s) Craig Smith
Publisher(s)
Translator(s)

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The Origin of Tripartite Division of Speech in Semitic Grammar: I, 1962
By: J. B. Fischer
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)

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Prophecy Between Poetics and Politics from Al-Farabi to Leo Strauss
By: Peter Makhlouf
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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Rhetoric and Islamic Political Philosophy, 1972
By: Charles E. Butterworth
Title Rhetoric and Islamic Political Philosophy
Type Article
Language English
Date 1972
Journal International Journal of Middle East Studies
Volume 3
Issue 2
Pages 187-198
Categories Rhetoric, Politics, Commentary
Author(s) Charles E. Butterworth
Publisher(s)
Translator(s)

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Rhetorical Studies in America. The Place of Averroës and the Medieval Arab Commentators, 1996
By: Mark Schaub
Title Rhetorical Studies in America. The Place of Averroës and the Medieval Arab Commentators
Type Article
Language English
Date 1996
Journal Alif. Journal of Comparative Poetics
Volume 16
Pages 233–253
Categories Rhetoric, Commentary
Author(s) Mark Schaub
Publisher(s)
Translator(s)

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The Islamization of Rhetoric: Ibn Rushd and the Reintroduction of Aristotle into Medieval Europe, 2008
By: Shane Borrowman
Title The Islamization of Rhetoric: Ibn Rushd and the Reintroduction of Aristotle into Medieval Europe
Type Article
Language English
Date 2008
Journal Rhetoric Reviewv
Volume 27
Issue 4 (October-December 2008)
Pages 341-360
Categories Aristotle, Rhetoric, Tradition and Reception
Author(s) Shane Borrowman
Publisher(s)
Translator(s)
The development of the rhetorical tradition in the West owes a largely unacknowledged debt to Islamic scholars. Between 711 and 1492 CE, Muslim-controlled Spain became a significant site of scholarly inquiry into the European Classical heritage—often involving the efforts of Christian, Jewish, and Muslim thinkers. One of the luminaries of this scholarly tradition is Ibn Rushd (known more generally by his Latinized name, Averroes), known to Medieval thinkers as “The Commentator” for his vast, multifaceted corpus of work on Aristotle, The Master of Those Who Know.

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The Medieval Subjugation and the Existential Elevation of Rhetoric, 1972
By: Craig Smith
Title The Medieval Subjugation and the Existential Elevation of Rhetoric
Type Article
Language English
Date 1972
Journal Philosophy & Rhetoric
Volume 5
Issue 3
Pages 159-174
Categories Rhetoric, Aristotle, Logic
Author(s) Craig Smith
Publisher(s)
Translator(s)

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The Origin of Tripartite Division of Speech in Semitic Grammar: I, 1962
By: J. B. Fischer
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)

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