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In The Semantics of Qurʾanic Language: al-Āḫira, Ghassan el Masri offers a semantic study of the concept al-āḫira ‘the End’ in the Qurʾān. The study is prefaced with a detailed account of the late antique concept of etymologia (Semantic Etymology). In his work, he demonstrates the necessity of this concept for appreciating the Qurʾān’s rhetorical strategies for claiming discursive authority in the Abrahamic theological tradition. The author applies the etymological tool to his investigation of the theological significance of al-āḫira, and concludes that the concept is polysemous, and tolerates a large variety of interpretations. The work is unique in that it draws extensively on Biblical material and presents a plethora of pre-Islamic poetry verses in the analysis of the concept.
Ghassan el Masri, Dr. Phil (2011), Freie Universität Berlin, teaches and researches at the university. He has published several articles on the Qurʾān and Pre-Islamic Poetry.
1. Introduction2. Etymology, Historic and Semantic3. Arabian Terms and Notions4. Time between Beginning and End5. Biblical Vocabulary6. The Qurʾanic Shifts7. The Middle Meccan Period8. The Late Meccan Period9. The Medinan Developments10. ConclusionAppendix – Occurrences of the Root ʾ-ḫ-r and their CorrelatesBibliographyIndex