Mohsen Goudarzi Explained

Mohsen Goudarzi Taghanaki is a Quranic studies scholar and assistant professor of Islamic studies at Harvard Divinity School.[1]

He investigates the Qur’an and early Islamic history through multiple analytical lenses, such as literary, linguistic, comparative, and historical methods.[2] He is especially focused on understanding how the Qur'an reveals the religious developments of Late Antiquity and the early Islamic period.[1]

Biography

Early life and education

Goudarzi grew up in Tehran, Iran.[3] Following high school, he earned both undergraduate and graduate degrees in computer engineering.[3] Subsequently, he pursued a master's degree in religious studies at Stanford University, driven by a longstanding interest in the humanities and religious history.[3] Goudarzi received his PhD from Harvard University in 2018.[4]

Career

Mohsen Goudarzi became a faculty member at Harvard Divinity School in July 2021. Before that, he taught at the University of Minnesota.[1] [5]

Scholarly views and contributions

Classification of Quranic studies scholars

Behnam Sadeghi and Mohsen Goudarzi classify Quranic studies scholars into four main groups. "Traditionalists" accept the conventional Muslim narrative about the Quran's compilation and canonization. "Revisionists," including scholars like Wansbrough, Patricia Crone, Alfred Louis de Prémare, and David Powers, view the process as more complex and extended. "Skeptics" doubt the traditional accounts but at the same time find the revisionist theories unconvincing. Lastly, "neotraditionalists," such as Motzki, Muhammad Muhaysin, and Michael Cook (who transitioned from revisionism), critically examine the sources to support key aspects of the traditional account, without accepting it fully at face value.[6] Although this classification has been generally accepted by many scholars,[7] Munim Sirry finds it "problematic as it is based on the pejorative assumption that traditionalists are, by definition, not critical."[8]

Textual history of the Quran

Sadeghi and Goudarzi seeks to demonstrate that the transmission of the Quran occurred "most likely via hearers who wrote down a text that was directed by the prophet."[9]

According to Éléonore Cellard, Sadeghi and Goudarzi's textual reconstruction is "currently the most complete edition of the Saṇā palimpsest."[10] Marijn van Putten states that Sadeghi and Goudarzi's work "has significantly contributed to a better understanding of the textual history of the Quran."[11]

Scripturology

Goudarzi defends a two kitab hypothesis, arguing that the Torah and the Qur'an are the only two scriptures referred to as "kitāb" by the Qur'an due to their unique nature as comprehensive texts providing historical and legal knowledge. In contrast, the Injil, or Gospels, is not considered a complete "kitāb" in the same way as the Torah.[12] According to Nicolai Sinai, Goudarzi's arguments for two kitab hypothesis is "rigorous and sophisticated".[12] His thesis has been endorsed by Saqib Hussain in his 2022 Oxford PhD dissertation.[13]

Ishmaelite particularism

Goudarzi contends that the Qur'an introduces a unique form of particularism, without discarding its universalist tendencies, not rooted in Israelite traditions but in Ishmaelite ones, emphasizing the descendants of both Israel and Ishmael.[14] According to Holger Zellentin, such a scheme already appears to align with the Qur'an's broader narrative concerning Israelite law.[14]

Works

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Mohsen Goudarzi . Harvard Divinity School (HDS) . 2024-08-16.
  2. Web site: The Qur’an and Its Cultic Subtext . Yale MacMillan Center Council on Middle East Studies . 2024-08-16.
  3. Web site: The Call of the Qur'an . Harvard Divinity School (HDS) . 2022-11-03 . 2024-08-16.
  4. Book: Loynes, S.P. . Revelation in the Qur’an: A Semantic Study of the Roots n-z-l and w-ḥ-y . Brill . Texts and Studies on the Qurʾān . 2021 . 978-90-04-45297-8 . 2024-08-16 . 165.
  5. Web site: Hayden . Maria . Qur'anic Studies Professor Joins RELS . College of Liberal Arts . 2019-01-10 . 2024-08-16.
  6. Book: Bearman, P. . Peters . R. . The Ashgate Research Companion to Islamic Law . Taylor & Francis . 2016 . 978-1-317-04305-8 . 2024-08-16 . 57.
  7. Benmessaoud . Sanaa . Fareh . Shehdeh . Abidi . Leila . Images of the Qur’an in Western scholarship: a socio-narrative approach . Cogent Arts & Humanities . Informa UK Limited . 11 . 1 . 2024-01-21 . 2331-1983 . 10.1080/23311983.2024.2303183 .
  8. Book: Sirry, M. . Controversies over Islamic Origins: An Introduction to Traditionalism and Revisionism . Cambridge Scholars Publishing . 2021 . 978-1-5275-7134-1 . 2024-08-16 . 117.
  9. Book: Salama, M. . God's Other Book: The Qur'ān Between History and Ideology . University of California Press . 2024 . 978-0-520-39184-0 . 2024-08-16 . 218.
  10. Cellard . Éléonore . The Ṣanʿāʾ Palimpsest: Materializing the Codices . Journal of Near Eastern Studies . 80 . 1 . 2021 . 0022-2968 . 10.1086/713473 . 1–30.
  11. van Putten . Marijn . "The Grace of God" as evidence for a written Uthmanic archetype: the importance of shared orthographic idiosyncrasies . Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies . 82 . 2 . 2019 . 0041-977X . 10.1017/S0041977X19000338 . 271–288.
  12. Book: Sinai, N. . Key Terms of the Qur'an: A Critical Dictionary . Princeton University Press . 2023 . 978-0-691-24132-6 . 2024-08-16 . 594.
  13. Hussain, M. S. (2022). Wisdom in the Qur'an [PhD thesis]. University of Oxford.
  14. Book: Zellentin, H.M. . Law Beyond Israel: From the Bible to the Qur'an . Oxford University Press . Oxford studies in the Abrahamic religions . 2022 . 978-0-19-967557-9 . 2024-08-16 . 108.