Islamic Civilization: The Formative Period ca History Fall 2018 Monday and Wednesday 11:00 AM-12:15 PM Location: HLT 190

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Islamic Civilization: The Formative Period ca. 500-1258 History - 280 Fall 2018 Monday and Wednesday 11:00 AM-12:15 PM Location: HLT 190 Instructor: Dr. Arthur Zárate azarate@uwm.edu Office: Holton 381 Office hours: By appointment COURSE DESCRIPTION AND REQUIREMENTS: What is Islam? A religion? A culture? A civilization? How can we make sense of the many diverse expressions of Islamic culture and religious life that have existed historically and still speak meaningfully of a singular Islam? What is Islamic history and what are its sources? What are the different approaches to studying it? How have Muslim peoples historically impacted the cultures and societies of Europe? And given this impact, can and should we speak of Islam and the West as separate, distinct entities? Finally, on what basis can non-muslims study and engage the Qur an? In this course, we will consider these and other questions. Its primary objective is to introduce students to the broad contours of early Islamic history from approximately 500 to 1258 AD the so-called formative period, during which much of what we take as Islam today was formed. We will explore the origins of the Muslim community, the career and life of the Prophet Muhammad, the foundation of caliphate and its gradual fragmentation, as well as the development of Islamic theology, philosophy, law and mysticism, otherwise known as Sufism. Our exploration will be based upon secondary sources, but will also consider Islamic primary source literature, including the Qur an, theological and philosophical tracts, and Sufi narratives, and other types of primary sources, such as archeological and numismatic evidence. REQUIRED TEXTS (available for order at the university book store or online): Peter Adamson, Philosophy in the Islamic World: A Very Short Introduction (New York: Oxford University Press, 2015) Jonathan Berkey, The Formation of Islam: Religion and Society in the Near East, 600-1800 (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2003) (Also available online for UWM students at http://uwm.edu/libraries/) Fred M. Donner, Muhammad and the Believers: At the Origins of Islam (Cambridge Mass.: The Belknap Press of Harvard University Press, 2010) Carole Hillenbrand, Introduction to Islam: Beliefs and Practices in Historical Perspective (New York: Thames and Hudson, 2015) Jonathan Lyons, The House of Wisdom: How the Arabs Transformed Western Civilization (New York: Bloomsbury Press, 2009) OTHER : The instructor will provide all other course readings as PDFs. EXPECTATIONS: 1

In addition to attending class, I expect that each of you will dedicate at least six to nine hours per week closely reading your textbooks and taking notes. While you read, I expect you to follow and understand the authors arguments and narratives. In the class room, I will mix lectures with frequent questions and discussions about these texts and other matters that may arise. You are expected to engage your fellow classmates in class discussion. GRADES: Course grades are based on the following formula: 30% course participation; 25% The House of Wisdom Study Guides; 25% in-class midterm exam; 25% in-class final exam. Grade scale Letter Grade Percentage Score A 93-100% A- 90-92 B+ 87-89 B 83-86 B- 80-82 C+ 77-79 C 73-76 C- 70-72 D+ 67-69 D 63-66 D- 60-62 F 0-59 EXAMS: There are two in-class exams; a midterm (10/24) and a final (12/20). HOUSE OF WISDOM STUDY GUIDES: There are four study guides on the Lyons text that the instructor will distribute. Each study guide is comprised of a series of questions that students must answer. All four must be completed and delivered to the instructor via email as a Word document before or on the last day of class (12/12). Late study guides will not be accepted. CLASS PARTICIPATION: Course participation will be assessed based upon attendance (10%), discussion in class (10%), the submission of weekly short response paragraphs (10%), and occasional quizzes. ATTENDANCE IS MANDATORY. Each week the instructor will compose questions to facilitate student reading and in-class discussion on Canvas. Students are required to write an approximately 300-word paragraph responding to one question composed by the instructor weekly. Students must complete and submit their response paragraph by 11:59pm on each Sunday. LATE POSTS WILL NOT BE ACCEPTED. Although students are required to 2

respond in writing only to one question, they are expected to come to class prepared to discuss ALL questions. ELECTRONIC DEVICES IN CLASS: You may use a laptop or tablet in class, but ONLY for note taking. This is a zero-tolerance policy: any off-task computer use will result in the immediate forfeiture of the privilege of using a computer in class for the remainder of the semester. Please turn off and put away your phones before class. DISABILITIES: If you have a verified disability, please contact me immediately to discuss accommodations. If you work with the Accessibility Resource Center (ARC), please bring your documents to me within the first two weeks of class. ACADEMIC ADVISING IN HISTORY: All L&S students have to declare and complete an academic major to graduate. If you have earned in excess of 45 credits and have not yet declared a major, you are encouraged to do so. If you either are interested in declaring a major (or minor) in History or require academic advising in History, please visit the Department of History undergraduate program web page at https://uwm.edu/history/undergraduate/advising/ for information on how to proceed. ACADEMIC MISCONDUCT: Plagiarism and other forms of academic misconduct are not tolerated. For more information on plagiarism see, http://guides.library.uwm.edu/noplagiarism On academic misconduct see, https://uwm.edu/deanofstudents/conduct/conduct_procedures/academic-misconduct/ Please see the following links for information regarding: Accommodations for religious observance: http://www4.uwm.edu/secu/docs/other/s1.5.htm Accommodations for military service: http://www4.uwm.edu/academics/military.cfm Incomplete policy: https://www4.uwm.edu/secu/docs/other/s_31_incomplete_grades.pdf Discriminatory conduct policies: https://www4.uwm.edu/secu/docs/other/s_47_discrimina_duct_policy.pdf Grade appeal procedures: http://www4.uwm.edu/secu/docs/other/s28.htm CLASS SCHEDULE AND : Week 1: The U.S., the Middle East, and the Humanities Wed. Sept 5: What are the humanities? Why are they important? Why study Islam? In other words, why are you here? Secondary sources: Mark Slouka, Dehumanized, Harper s Magazine (Sept. 2009), 32-40; Eddie S. Glaude Jr., A Liberal Arts Education in the Age of Trump, Journal of the American Academy of Religion, (June 2018), 297 306 3

Week 2: Orientalism and Orthodoxy Mon. Sept. 10: What is Orientalism? In class film Edward Said on Orientalism https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fvc8eyd_z_g Wed. Sept. 12: What is Islam? Rethinking Orthodoxy Week 3: Foundations Secondary sources: Elias Muhanna, How Has Islamic Orthodoxy Changed Over Time? The Nation (Jan. 2016); Shahab Ahmed, What is Islam? The Importance of Being Islamic, 3-31; 113-129; Adam Silverstein, Islamic History: A Very Short Introduction, 80-107 Mon. Sept. 17: Late Antiquity and Pre-Islamic Arabia Wed. Sept. 19: Map and Cultural Knowledge Quiz Secondary Sources: Hillenbrand, 17-29; Donner, xi-39; Berkey, 39-49 Primary Sources: F.E. Peters (here after Peters), A Reader on Classical Islam, 11-20, 22-24, 35-42 Week 4: Muhammad, the Believers, and the Question of Sources Mon. Sept. 24: Revelation in Context and the Prophetic Career Wed. Sept. 26: The Community of the Believers Secondary Sources: Donner, 39-89; Hillenbrand, 29-49; 52-57; Berkey, 57-69 Primary Sources: Peters, 43-55 Week 5: The Death of a Prophet and the Foundation of an Empire Mon. Oct. 1 Succession to the Prophet Wed. Oct. 3 Civil War and Conquests 4

Secondary Sources: Donner, 90-144; Berkey, 70-75 Primary Sources: The Umma Document, (Donner, Appendix A, 227-232); Qur an 3:113-116, (Donner, 70); Qur an 29:46, (Donner, 72); Dam Inscription at al-ta if, (Donner, 99); Text of Thomas the Presbyter, (Donner, 106); Mosaic Floor From St. Menas Church, (Donner, 108); Two Early Coins of the Believers Regime, (Donner, 113); Treaty Text, Tiflis, (Donner, 117) Week 6: al-qur an al-karim (The Generous Qur an) Mon. Oct 8: The Qur an as a Historical Document Wed. Oct 10: How to Read the Qur an Week 7: The Caliphate Mon. Oct. 15 Wed. Oct. 22 Secondary Sources: Hillenbrand, 58-88; Carl W. Ernst, How to Read the Qur an: A New Guide With Selected Translations; 32-58; 76-79; 83-92; 105-110; 138-171 Primary Sources: Qur an 74:29-31 (Ernst, 46-47); Qur an 79:1-46 (Ernst, 79); Qur an 60:1-13 (Ernst, 164-166) Secondary Sources: Donner, 145-224; Berkey, 76-90 Primary Sources: Peters, 117-121; 128-131 Week 8: The Prophet s Uncle and the Abbasid Revolution Mon. Oct. 22 In-class film, The Caliphate Wed. Oct. 24 **MIDTERM EXAM** 5

Secondary Sources: Berkey, 102-109; Hillenbrand, 89-113; Lyons 1-51; Ira Lapidus, Islamic Societies to the Nineteenth Century: A Global History, 91-109 Week 9: People of the Tradition and the Community, and The Partisans of Ali (103) Mon. Oct. 29 Wed. Oct. 21 Secondary Sources: Hillenbrand, 114-128; 138-165; Berkey, 113-151 Primary Sources: Peters, 109-113; 122-128; 133-142 Week 10: Slave Soldiers and Sultans Mon. Nov. 5 (VOTE TOMORROW!!) Wed. Nov. 7 Secondary Sources: Berkey, 179-222; Lapidus, 229-262; Lyons, 55-77 Primary Sources: Peters, 142-150 Week 11: Islamic Thought and Theology Mon. Nov. 12 Wed. Nov 14 Secondary Sources: Hillenbrand, 169-183; Lyons, 55-99; Adamson, 1-29. Primary Sources: Peters, 358-368 Week 12: Science and Translation Mon. Nov. 19 Wed. Nov. 21 (NO CLASS, THANKSGIVING) 6

Secondary Sources: Lyons, 103-161; Adamson, 30-77 Week 13: Philosophy and Ethics Mon. Nov. 26 Wed. Nov. 28 Secondary Sources: Lyons, 165-201; Adamson, 78-117 Primary Sources: Peters, 189-191; 203-207; 368-377; 405-408 Week 14: Asceticism, Piety, and Sufism Mon. Dec 3 Wed. Dec. 5 Secondary Sources: Hillenbrand, 189-213; Berkey, 152-158 Primary Sources: Peters, 310-321; 325-334 Week 15: Sufism and its Variations Mon. Dec. 10 Wed. Dec. 12 Secondary Sources: Berkey, 231-247 Primary Sources: Peters, 335-351; 382-388 Thurs. 12/20 **FINAL EXAM** (10am-12pm in HLT 190) 7

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