Language Notes
Original Language: French
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
19 of 19 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
One of the Best Works in the Field of Akbarian Scholarship,
By A Customer
This review is from: An Ocean Without Shore: Ibn Arabi, the Book, and the Law (Hardcover)
I read the book a few years back, and found it to be one of the most lucid studies of Ibn Arabi. Chodkiewicz is one of the two most distinguished scholars in the Western Academic world on Shaikh al-Akbar, the Greatest Shaikh, as he was entitled by those, in the words of R.A. Nicholson, "most qualified to judge". The other is William Chittick.The book, as the title informs, is about the relationship between law and the spiritual journey, in other words, between the outward and the inward. It reveals the attempt of one of medieval Islam's greatest gnostics to bridge the apparently irreconcilable gap between the spirit and the letter. Chodkiewicz exposes IA's radically literalistic interpretive method of deriving of the most esoteric meanings by way of deconstructing Koranic words into their roots, and then presenting the meanings of the word-roots as the esoteric meaning of the text. By such an approach the "hidden" or esoteric is brought to the fore by the most stringent form of exotericism -- hence there is a meeting of opposites, the veil become the face. It is interesting to note that IA was affiliated with the Dhahirism, which was Islam's most literalistic legal school. Yet, ironically, he was also the greatest esotericist. On a final note: Chodkiewicz also presents the views of later Islamic scholars on how they perceived (and misperceived) IA. This gives a better contextual understanding of IA's influence.
9 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Somethings they get better with time,
By Nuruddin Margarit "Sidinur" (Granada) - See all my reviews
This review is from: An Ocean Without Shore: Ibn Arabi, the Book, and the Law (Paperback)
(Sorry but English it is not my mother-tongue) Althought there have been a lot of works wrtten in this last 15 years (thanks to Chittick, Morris, Gril and many more) this remains, with Seal of the Saints, an incredible book: academic in its precision and schoolarship, but inspiring and aweful in its meaning and kowledge. I thinks these are two "must" lectures for anyone who want to plunge himself in Ibn 'Arabi's lessons, in sufism in general, and in the meanings of the Qur'an. "Sidi" Chodkiewizc, in his discrection, is still an outstanding figure in Ibn 'Arabi's studies, and a helpful hand to enter in the meaning of Islam and sufism.
6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Review by James W. Morris,
This review is from: An Ocean Without Shore: Ibn Arabi, the Book, and the Law (Paperback)
In most areas of scholarship there are one or two books so uniquely rich in their depth of insight, breadth of understanding, and richness of expression and illustration that even their individual footnotes become, as it were, the seeds of whole volumes of research in later generations. This deceptively short volume, which so ably condenses the fruits of decades of intensive study and reflection on Ibn 'Arabî (as well as his disciples and heirs throughout the Islamic world) is clearly just such a landmark in "Akbarî" studies. Its basic unifying theme - familiar enough to even the novice reader of Ibn 'Arabî today - is the Qur'anic (and Prophetic) inspiration and aims of all the Shaykh's writing. But here Professor Chodkiewicz, referring primarily to the "ocean" of al-Futűhât al-Makkîya as well as a host of other untranslated (and often unedited) texts and commentaries, has systematically developed that theme to a depth that goes far beyond academic philology and amply illustrates the profoundly transforming power of Ibn 'Arabî's own "spiritual hermeneutics" of Islamic scripture. For those interested in the Shaykh's own life, this volume also highlights some of the deeper roots of his own extraordinary personal claims with regard to his "realization" of the Qur'an and the inner dimension of prophecy, themes which are examined in more detail in two other recently translated studies, The Seal of the Saints (by the same author) and Claude Addas' biography, The Quest for the Red Sulphur.
There is no question, then, that this is in many respects an "advanced" work, almost an agenda (as well as an indispensable reference work) for future study: indeed very few modern scholars could honestly lay claim to the familiar mastery of Arabic, of the Qur'an and hadith, and of so many different writings of the Shaykh and his disciples which this book often presupposes. On the other hand, serious students of Ibn 'Arabî will recognize many familiar themes from the works that are available in translation, and - while acknowledging how much of this "ocean" still remains uncharted - will surely be challenged to re-read and re-explore those available texts from new perspectives. The author's Introduction (pp. 1-18) is an especially striking illustration of that process. At first reading, the Introduction may seem like nothing more than history: a highly condensed survey of the far-reaching "manifestations" of Ibn 'Arabî's work for centuries throughout the Islamic world, focusing especially on the recent research by the author (as well as his many colleagues and students from France and the Arab world) that has helped to bring out the actual social bases (tariqas, ethical manuals, etc.) for the popular spread of Ibn 'Arabî's insights, especially in the Ottoman period, far beyond the line of his avowed disciples and commentators. By the time one has completed reading the book, however, it will be quite evident just how and to what extent those same historical data are also meant to illuminate the nature and seriousness of the Shaykh's meta-historical claims concerning the "Seal of the saints" and his special inner relationship with both the Qur'an and the "Reality of Muhammad." Each of the book's five chapters richly illustrates, at progressively deeper levels of expression and meaning, the full Qur'anic inspiration of all of Ibn 'Arabi's works. Not surprisingly, the first two chapters highlight themes and typical methods of scriptural interpretation - such as Ibn 'Arabî's consistent focus on the "letter" of revelation even in his apparently most original (or outrageous) insights; his stress on the ongoing, "perpetual descent" of the inner meanings of the Qur'an within each purified heart; or the metaphysical "universality" of the Qur'an and the Source of all prophecy - which should be familiar to most students of the Fusűs al-Hikam and other widely available works. The second chapter also includes a very clear and accessible summary of Prof. Chodkiewicz' seminal research on two major topics in the Shaykh's teaching: his discussion of the various types and ranks and functions of the "friends of God" (from chapter 73 of the Futűhât), and his uniquely irenic understanding of the principles of fiqh, with its compelling practical and intellectual relevance to the contemporary Islamic world. The following two chapters, though, explore territory which has until now remained largely uncharted, at least in Western scholarship. Chapter 3 demonstrates in rigorous and convincing detail - focusing on the long Fasl al-Manâzil in the Futűhât - the multitude of precise ways in which the order, inner structures, and language and style of the Qur'an underlies the corresponding arrangement and meaning of all the Meccan Illuminations, including literally thousands of passages or allusions that would have remained mysterious and indecipherable without these essential "keys." Chapter 4 extends the same approach to revealing both the internal structure of other major works (such as the early K. al-Isrâ', the K. al-'Abâdila, the K. al-Tajalliyât), and, even more significantly, to suggesting the "networks" or "constellations" of Qur'anic allusion that form fundamental linkages - of both inspiration and cross-referential explanation - between chapters or sections of the Qur'an, the Futűhât, and each of Ibn 'Arabî's shorter works. While scholars and students of these untranslated (and often unedited) works may have intuitively felt, and even occasionally deciphered, some of these inner connections and allusions, the systematic results of Professor Chodkiewicz' methods and examples here (summarized in 35 pages of dense notes) are rich enough to orient the research of several generations of future scholars. Indeed anyone who has wrestled directly with the constantly recurrent mysteries and opaque passages to be found throughout the Shaykh's writings may well consider these two chapters to constitute a sort of "Rosetta Stone" in the gradual deciphering of Ibn 'Arabî's work. The final chapter, focusing on the integral relationship between religious practice and spiritual realization in all the Shaykh's writings, returns to a topic and illustrations (from the Fusűs al-Hikam and other translated works) familiar to a wider audience. Again the detailed analyses and synopses here - of the interplay between right actions and the attainment of karamât in the Mawâqi' al-Nujűm; of the roles of God and the individual soul in prayer in the Tanazzulât Mawsilîya; or of the constant allusions to the inner dimensions of salât throughout Tirmidhî's famous "spiritual questionnaire" in chapter 73 of the Futűhât - fully demonstrate both the author's mastery of the entire "Akbarî" corpus and the spiritual richness of these many texts that still await translation in order to reach the wider audience they deserve today. Any brief account of Prof. Chodkiewicz' book, with its massive illustration of the impact of the Qur'an and (selective) hadith on every dimension of Ibn 'Arabî's writing, almost inevitably suggests a sort of "apologetic" or narrowly sectarian approach and an intention - on the part of either the Shaykh or his modern interpreter - that is in fact almost diametrically opposed to the actual state of affairs. Readers familiar only with the many modern Western studies emphasizing the "universality" of the Shaykh's outlook, in particular, might find this approach somewhat surprising. But this apparent paradox is no mystery to students familiar with Ibn 'Arabî's own writings: as they know from their own experience, it is easily resolvable once one begins to appreciate the "Reality" (to use the Shaykh's own expression) to which Ibn 'Arabî is actually referring. And few secondary studies in this field bring the reader closer to that constantly revelatory, more than intellectual, experience of the Qur'an than this remarkable work. It is itself an extraordinary illustration of that "ascension into meaning" (mi'râj al-kalima, to borrow S. al-Hakîm's apt expression) which so uniquely typifies Ibn 'Arabî's own style and approach to revelation. The English translation, which includes a substantial index of Qur'anic verses and technical terms (but not, unfortunately, of hadith references), is quite readable on the whole, an especially commendable achievement given that so much of the original French text already consists of translations of Ibn 'Arabî's notoriously difficult language and close study of Arabic linguistic, religious and grammatical expressions.
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