INDEX TO VOLUME 2 TITLES OF ARTICLES Title A Quantitative and Stylo-Statistical Approach to the Phono- 19-45 Semantic Structure of Two Companion-Prayers of the Qur n: al-falaq and al-n s D r al-hijra in Kh rij and Ism l Thought 169-187 Factors Underlying Religious Orientation Scale: A Methodological 215-235 Approach Is a Non-metaphysical Religious Thought Possible? Possibility 145-167 of Religious Thought within the Scope of Heidegger s Ontotheology Criticism Kum n, Isti la, and Khalq: Three Concepts in Ibn azm s 83-109 Cosmology Relationship between Ab an fa and Zayd ibn Al : An Assessment in the Context of an Account in Majm al-fiqh 189-213 Remarks on Some Correspondence between Ankara and Yemen 69-82 Concerning the Last Ottomans at Yemen in the Early 1920s The Prayer of Jawshan A Study of Its Sources 47-68 The Problem of the Relevance of Time and Space to the Qur nic 9-18 Text BOOKS REVIEWED Title/Author Early Ib Literature: Abu l-mundhir Bash r b. Mu ammad b. 137-140 Ma b b Kit b al-ra f fi l-taw d, Kit b al-mu raba and S ra, by Abdulrahman al-salimi and Wilferd Madelung (eds.) Al-Ghaz l s Philosophical Theology, by Frank Griffel 247-253
Maintaining the Sacred Center: The Bosnian City of Stolac 241-246 by Rusmir Mahmut ehaji Muslims: Their Religious Beliefs and Practices, by Andrew Rippin 238-240 Spiritual Purification in Islam: The Life and Works of al- 126-132 Muhasibi, by Gavin Picken Teaching Islam: Islamic Religious Education in Sweden, by 133-136 Jenny Berglund The Formation of Islamic Hermeneutics: How Sunni Legal Theorists Imagined a Revealed Law, by David R. Vishanoff 254-256 The Qur an: Its Biblical Subtext, by Gabriel Said Reynolds 112-121 The Qur an: Modern Muslim Interpretations, by Massimo 122-125 Campanini CONFERENCES REPORTED Title International Conference: Takfir: A Diachronic Perspective (24-26 October 2011) International Symposium on Mull Khusraw (18-20 November 2011) 258-264 265-267 TITLE OF OBITUARY Title Ibrahim M. Abu-Rabi (1956-2011): A Reflection 271-273
ILAHIYAT STUDIES A Journal on Islamic and Religious Studies www.ilahiyatstudies.org Volume 2, Number 2, Summer / Fall 2011 GUIDELINES FOR CONTRIBUTORS The papers submitted to Ilahiyat Studies should make some noticeable contribution to Islamic and religious studies. The papers will be held to imply that it contains original unpublished work and is not being submitted for publication elsewhere. Since Ilahiyat Studies sends all papers for review, a copy should be submitted in a form suitable for sending anonymously to the reviewers. Manuscripts are evaluated by anonymous peer review, therefore, authors must remove all identifying information from their texts. Authors should refer to themselves in the text and citations in the third person. For example, instead of writing I argue (Nasr, 2007). write Nasr (1997) argues All submissions are assessed by referees, but the Editorial board reserves the right to decide what articles will be published. Unsolicited book reviews may not be published. Full name(s) of author(s) must be listed, along with university or professional affiliation, address, city, state, country, phone/fax number(s), and email address where you can be reached. Provide a two-sentence biography that we can use in your article. Current information only. All papers must include an abstract of no more 150 words. It is strongly advised that the length of the article should not exceed 8000 words. Book reviews and conference reports must not exceed 1500 words. All pages should be numbered consecutively. All papers should have an introductory section in which the objectives and methodology of the article are explained and a final section, which summarizes the main points, discussed and the conclusions reached. Manuscripts should be typed double-spaced on one side of the A4 only. Tables, graphs and figures should be on separate pages. All submissions should be in MS-Word (97-2003, 2007 or higher) format. Leave margins of at least 4 cm on top, bottom, and sides. A reference list must be included at the end of the manuscript in the following style: Journal Article & Entry Eichner, Heidrun, Dissolving the Unity of Metaphysics: From Fakhr al-d n al-r z to Mull adr al-sh r z, Medioevo 32 (2007), 139-197. Buckley, J. Jacobsen and Albrile, Ezio, Mandaean Religion, (trans. from Italian by Paul Ellis), Encyclopedia of Religion: Second Edition, (editor in chief: Lindsay Jones; USA: Thomson Gale, 2005), VIII, 5634-5640. Book K tib Chalab, j Khal fa Mu af ibn Abd All h, Kashf al- un n an as m l-kutub wa-lfun n, 2 vols., (eds. M. erefeddin Yaltkaya and Kilisli Rifat Bilge; Istanbul: Maarif Matbaas, 1941-1943). Michot, Yahya M., Ibn S n : Lettre au Vizir Ab Sa d: Editio princeps d après le manuscrit de Bursa, traduction de l arabe, introduction, notes et lexique (Beirut: al-bur q, 2000). Book Chapter Janssens, Jules, The Reception of Avicenna s Physics in the Latin Middle Ages in I. Vrolijk and J. P. Hogendijk (eds.), O ye Gentlemen: Arabic Studies on Science and Literary Culture in honour of Remke Kruk (Leiden & Boston: Brill, 2007), 55-64. Online Citation Rudolph, Kurt, Mandaeans: ii. The Mandaean Religion, Encyclopaedia Iranica, Online Edition, 20 January 2010, available at www.iranica.com/articles/mandaeans-2-religion Page references to works referred to in the text should take the following form: (Touraine, 1995: 9-10). The verses of the Qur n should be referred to as follows: Q 2:23; Q 17:108; the references from the Old and New Testament should carry chapter name and number, and verse number. Text and references must follow the format outlined in The Chicago Manual of Style, 15 th edition. Arabic words should be transliterated according the style used by the Library of Congress.
Author AUTHORS OF ARTICLES Avcu, Ali 169-187 Ayd nl, Abdullah 47-68 Fatani, Afnan H. 19-45 Gündüz, Eren Karaman, M. Lutfullah 189-213 69-82 Khodadady, Ebrahim & 215-235 Golparvar, Ehsan Kolo lu, Orhan ener 83-109 Küçükalp, Kas m 145-167 Tatar, Burhanettin 9-18 Reviewer REVIEWERS Ess, Josef van 126-132 Fideler, David 241-246 Gaiser, Adam 137-140 Gündüz, Turgay 133-136 Kaya, Veysel 247-253 Langermann, Tzvi Y. 112-121 Leaman, Oliver 238-240 Madelung, Wilferd 254-256 Saleh, Walid A. 122-125 Reporter REPORTERS Belhaj, Abdessamad 265-267 Gömbeyaz, Kadir 258-264 AUTHOR OF OBITUARY Author Markham, Ian S. 271-273
ILAHIYAT STUDIES A Journal on Islamic and Religious Studies www.ilahiyatstudies.org Volume 2, Number 2, Summer / Fall 2011 GUIDELINES FOR CONTRIBUTORS The papers submitted to Ilahiyat Studies should make some noticeable contribution to Islamic and religious studies. The papers will be held to imply that it contains original unpublished work and is not being submitted for publication elsewhere. Since Ilahiyat Studies sends all papers for review, a copy should be submitted in a form suitable for sending anonymously to the reviewers. Manuscripts are evaluated by anonymous peer review, therefore, authors must remove all identifying information from their texts. Authors should refer to themselves in the text and citations in the third person. For example, instead of writing I argue (Nasr, 2007). write Nasr (1997) argues All submissions are assessed by referees, but the Editorial board reserves the right to decide what articles will be published. Unsolicited book reviews may not be published. Full name(s) of author(s) must be listed, along with university or professional affiliation, address, city, state, country, phone/fax number(s), and email address where you can be reached. Provide a two-sentence biography that we can use in your article. Current information only. All papers must include an abstract of no more 150 words. It is strongly advised that the length of the article should not exceed 8000 words. Book reviews and conference reports must not exceed 1500 words. All pages should be numbered consecutively. All papers should have an introductory section in which the objectives and methodology of the article are explained and a final section, which summarizes the main points, discussed and the conclusions reached. Manuscripts should be typed double-spaced on one side of the A4 only. Tables, graphs and figures should be on separate pages. All submissions should be in MS-Word (97-2003, 2007 or higher) format. Leave margins of at least 4 cm on top, bottom, and sides. A reference list must be included at the end of the manuscript in the following style: Journal Article & Entry Eichner, Heidrun, Dissolving the Unity of Metaphysics: From Fakhr al-d n al-r z to Mull adr al-sh r z, Medioevo 32 (2007), 139-197. Buckley, J. Jacobsen and Albrile, Ezio, Mandaean Religion, (trans. from Italian by Paul Ellis), Encyclopedia of Religion: Second Edition, (editor in chief: Lindsay Jones; USA: Thomson Gale, 2005), VIII, 5634-5640. Book K tib Chalab, j Khal fa Mu af ibn Abd All h, Kashf al- un n an as m l-kutub wa-lfun n, 2 vols., (eds. M. erefeddin Yaltkaya and Kilisli Rifat Bilge; Istanbul: Maarif Matbaas, 1941-1943). Michot, Yahya M., Ibn S n : Lettre au Vizir Ab Sa d: Editio princeps d après le manuscrit de Bursa, traduction de l arabe, introduction, notes et lexique (Beirut: al-bur q, 2000). Book Chapter Janssens, Jules, The Reception of Avicenna s Physics in the Latin Middle Ages in I. Vrolijk and J. P. Hogendijk (eds.), O ye Gentlemen: Arabic Studies on Science and Literary Culture in honour of Remke Kruk (Leiden & Boston: Brill, 2007), 55-64. Online Citation Rudolph, Kurt, Mandaeans: ii. The Mandaean Religion, Encyclopaedia Iranica, Online Edition, 20 January 2010, available at www.iranica.com/articles/mandaeans-2-religion Page references to works referred to in the text should take the following form: (Touraine, 1995: 9-10). The verses of the Qur n should be referred to as follows: Q 2:23; Q 17:108; the references from the Old and New Testament should carry chapter name and number, and verse number. Text and references must follow the format outlined in The Chicago Manual of Style, 15 th edition. Arabic words should be transliterated according the style used by the Library of Congress.
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