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AUTHORITY, CONFLICT, AND THE TRANSMISSION OF DIVERSITY IN MEDIEVAL ISLAMIC LAW. By R. Kevin Jaques. Brill 2006. Pp. xvii + 279. $177.00. ISBN: 9-004-14745-4. R. Kevin Jaques s monograph investigates the Tabaqat al-fuqaha al-shafi iyah of Ibn Qadi Shuhbah (d. 851/1448) 1 (22) a biographical dictionary of Shafi i legal scholars to discuss authority in a time of legal decline (23) and social turmoil. In an introduction and eight chapters, Jaques pursues three interrelated areas of inquiry: the structure and function of tabaqat texts, which he correctly deems one of our most important sources of information on medieval Islamic thought (55); debates among Shafi i legal scholars about method and authority; and the societal role of the law itself and jurists as a group in upholding it. Along the way, he provides useful information on the early madhhab authorities as well as the core texts of the developed Shafi i curriculum, focused on the notion of authoritative divergence or ikhtilaf. In the Introduction ( Crisis, Legal Decline, and the Tabaqat Genre ), Jaques sets up the historical context and lays out his argument. In the Mamluk-era eschatological crisis, jurists were responsible for the maintenance of social order by discovering and administering the law, but their ability to fulfill this function was threatened, in Ibn Qadi Shuhbah s view, by the collapse of legal ability among low and middle level jurists. (25) His Tabaqat presented a vision of the Shafi i legal school aimed at resolving the crisis: by highlighting the importance of transmission of divergent opinions (ikhtilaf) from those whose voices in disagreement should be considered authoritative, (43) he sought to enable ordinary jurists to fulfill their crucial role. Through the careful composition and structuring of his work, aimed at other legal scholars, Ibn Qadi Shuhbah valued rules over method, praised in-depth personalized jurisprudential learning over professional training, and not surprisingly promoted his own authority. Chapter One presents A Brief Biography of Ibn Qadi Shuhbah, arranged chronologically from his family heritage through his professional career, including a rise to the position of chief judge of Damascus. It also gives an overview of his Tabaqat, first completed in 841/1437, with a fourth and final edition completed in 844/1440. (50-1. Dates are given in the format: hijri/common era. 101

102 JOURNAL OF LAW & RELIGION [Vol. XXIV 51) Chapter Two ( A Brief Discursus on the Diversity of Source Material and Authorial Choice ) argues that Ibn Qadi Shuhbah, like all tabaqat authors, exercises control over the composition of biographical entries (55) to make claims about particular networks of authority. Carefully analyzing a series of notices including that of Ibn Qadi Shuhbah for the relatively undistinguished fourth/tenth-century Shafi i jurist al-daraki, Jaques demonstrates that tabaqat writers such as Ibn Qadi Shuhbah were able to construct entries by combining received information and then selectively mixing, removing, interpolating, and recasting passages, and thus altering material to imply ideas that may not have been intended by their original authors. (89) Chapter Three ( Micro-Textual Rhetorical Strategies in Ibn Qadi Shuhbah s Text: Authority, Death, and the Origins of Ikhtilaf in the Shafi i Madhhab ) follows up on the insight that most writers were careful and rather masterful manipulators of previous material. (89) Jaques makes the case for treating biographical dictionaries as complex texts rather than as transparent source material that merely reflects reality and preserves data. (Jaques s keen awareness of the role of authorial choice in shaping any biographical portrait must have made composing the previous chapter s sketch of Ibn Qadi Shuhbah challenging.) My only quibble here is that Jaques overstates the originality of his approach in comparison to how tabaqat texts are typically treated. (113, similarly at 56) A 1977 essay by Fedwa Malti- Douglas which Jaques surprisingly does not cite compares nearly two dozen biographical notices for al-khatib al-baghdadi to very similar effect. 2 Even among historians of Islamic law, the notion that tabaqat entries were shaped by their author s distinctive concerns is not novel. 3 Nonetheless, Jaques makes his point that tabaqat texts must be used with caution by intellectual historians (113) as he illustrates the hypertextual relationships between entries using the notices of early Shafi i authorities al-buwayti, al-muzani and al-rabi. In Chapter Four ( Macro-Textual Rhetorical Strategies: Trends in Learning as Indicators of Intellectual Development ), Jaques shows how Ibn Qadi Shuhbah structures the Tabaqat to illuminate the development 2. Fedwa Malti-Douglas, Controversy and its Effects in the Biographical Tradition of al- Khatîb al-baghdâdî, 96 Studia Islamica 115-131 (1977), republished in Fedwa Malti-Douglas, Power, Marginality, and the Body in Medieval Islam (Variorium Collected Stud. Series, Ashgate 2001). 3. See e.g. Nurit Tsafrir, Semi-Ḥanafīs and Ḥanafī Biographical Sources, 84 Studia Islamica 72 (1996).

101] BOOK REVIEW 103 of trends in intellectual history. (115) Ibn Qadi Shuhbah suggests a dearth of jurists able to perform ijtihad and ijtihad-like operations. 4 (116) Since few jurists are capable of independently drawing rules from source texts, they must learn doctrines from authorized figures and core madhhab texts. (120) This chapter also explores Ibn Qadi Shuhbah s authorial manipulation of different terms for educational relationships, mostly through selective omission of terminology present in earlier tabaqat texts, in order to convey his vision of their relative importance as methods of teaching or studying, their links to particular fields of learning, and their effect on the authority of individual scholars. In this vein, Jaques points out that the terms bahth and bahatha used to indicate especially high levels of achievement in learning appear rarely and only in the biography of a scholar in Ibn Qadi Shuhbah s intellectual pedigree, making clear these men s superior credentials and, by extension, his own. (134) Chapter Five ( The Development of Trends in the Transmission of Ilm ) treats ijtihad and ikhtilaf historically. Since Ibn Qadi Shuhbah saw the ability to conduct ijtihad as limited, it became important to assert the authority of substantive legal texts containing divergent legal opinions in particular, those of al-shirazi, al-rafi i and al-nawawi. (151) Substantive law (furu ) contained indeed, arose from the interaction of both core doctrines on which authoritative jurists have agreed (madhhab) and ikhtilaf, or authoritative dissenting opinions. (161) The crisis of legal decline was not due to the disappearance of the ability to perform ijtihad, which had always been fairly rare, but rather a reduction in the intensive personal legal training that [Ibn Qadi Shuhbah] prizes so highly, (183) making the existence and transmission of divergent substantive rules (182) more vital than ever. Chapter Six ( The Development of Legal Methodologies and the Decline of Legal Thinking ) points out further that the rise of usul alfiqh as a discipline and the greater specialization of jurists in that area coincided with a drop in the production of furu even though, Ibn Qadi Shuhbah holds, the real object of the legal profession was the rules themselves. (189) Shafi i s basic method (which Jaques calls rather simplistic (192) and rudimentary or practical (199)) was important, but training focused on speculative methodologies and expedient sciences that is, ancillary disciplines such as variant Qur anic readings, history, lexicography, and so forth correlated with the rise of deficient jurists and an end to specializations in fiqh, which were 4. See also fig. 5.4 at 165, one of the most useful of the book s numerous charts.

104 JOURNAL OF LAW & RELIGION [Vol. XXIV necessary for original legal discovery to continue. (219) Chapter Seven ( Curatives for the Decline of Law ) presents the culmination of Jaques s argument: Ibn Qadi Shuhbah sees key ikhtilaf texts as vital for jurists with deficient training to maintain the effective functioning of the law (226) necessary to curb social chaos. These texts, mostly centering on divergent opinions attributed to al-muzani and al-ghazali, expanded the range of opinions from which jurists could draw. (233) Although they seemed to present divergent opinions, they were linked through Ibn Qadi Shuhbah s construction of educative lineages to al-shafi i himself, thus guaranteeing their authoritativeness. The eighth and final chapter ( Ibn Qadi Shuhbah, Crisis, and His Authority ) shows how the Tabaqat presents different elements of Ibn Qadi Shuhbah s intellectual pedigree as well as familial lineage to present its author as an heir to the great scholars of the past and neatly bringing us back to the moment of crisis with which the study opened as a leader uniquely qualified to lead the Syrian Shafi i community in its hour of peril. (258) In closing, a word about the writing. The book contains a number of expository digressions. Some work well, including the discussion of an otherwise unimportant government crisis. (94-97) Explaining the context and references for a seemingly offhand remark from an entry devoted to the fifteenth-century jurist Ibn al-barizi, Jaques shows how in the space of just fifteen words (97) Ibn Qadi Shuhbah calls up a wealth of associative detail and networks of meaning. Other digressions, though, affect the flow of argument and consistency of tone to no apparent purpose. Specialists will not need the extended introductory discussion of usul al-fiqh (152-158) and readers who might find it useful are unlikely to appreciate this study s original contributions. Finally, and a reflection of Brill s lamentable decision to forgo copyediting control, grammatical and typographical errors abound. Occasional mistakes in published works are inevitable and all authors rue them, but there are enough here to be distracting to readers, beginning with the use of affect for effect in the third sentence (1) and continuing apace throughout the book. These minor points notwithstanding, Jaques s study is an important contribution to scholarship. Like Ibn Qadi Shuhbah s Tabaqat, it is a complex text that builds its argument in layers and rewards careful reading. It should be acquired by libraries and read by specialists in tabaqat literature, Mamluk history, and Islamic jurisprudence, particularly those with interests in the Shafi i madhhab.

101] BOOK REVIEW 105 Kecia Ali * * Assistant Professor, Department of Religion, Boston University, Boston, Massachusetts.