BEGIN:VCALENDAR
VERSION:2.0
X-WR-CALNAME:EventsCalendar
BEGIN:VEVENT
CATEGORIES:Seminars
DESCRIPTION:Abstract:&nbsp;Building on Ibn ʿAṭiyya&rsquo;s (d. 541 AH/1147 CE) observation that the verb&ndash;preposition pairings ʾarsala ʿalā and ʾarsala ʾilā appear in similar contexts in the Qurʾān, I will argue that the two constructions are nonetheless functionally differentiated. I will show that ʾarsala ʿalā occurs predominantly in passages of divine punishment or retribution, whereas ʾarsala ʾilā is associated chiefly with divine communication and prophetic mission. A corpus-based analysis of all attestations of these verb&ndash;preposition collocations across the Qurʾān brings into view distributional and discourse-level regularities that are easily overlooked in traditional, manual exegesis. These findings call for a reassessment of variant readings (qirāʾāt), with particular attention to Q 17:68&ndash;69, where alternative dotting of the consonantal text (rasm) yields shifts in verbal subject. These findings, in turn, motivate a reassessment of variant readings (qirāʾāt), with particular attention to Q 17:68&ndash;69, where alternative dotting of the consonantal text (rasm) produces shifts in verbal subject. The paper thus demonstrates how digital, corpus-linguistic methods can sharpen our understanding of Qurʾānic stylistics while contributing to the evaluation of variant readings within the Qurʾān&rsquo;s broader oral-written transmission history. &nbsp; Bio:&nbsp;Orhan Elmaz&nbsp;is a&nbsp;Senior&nbsp;Lecturer&nbsp;at the University of St Andrews, where he&nbsp;teaches&nbsp;multilingual&nbsp;Digital Humanities and classical and modern Arabic language, literature, and culture. His research&nbsp;reflects a dynamic integration of linguistic tradition, digital methods, and cultural analysis. His&nbsp;area lies at the intersection of linguistics, intellectual history, and transcultural studies. He has published on the Qur&rsquo;an (and its use and abuse), Arabic and Semitic linguistics, and&nbsp;One Thousand and One Nights.&nbsp;Currently, he is working on the emergence of feminist ideas and their translingual and transregional development, contrasting different Muslim-majority and Muslim-minority communities of&nbsp;the Middle East, Europe, and Central Asia in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. He is the author of&nbsp;Studien zu den koranischen Hapaxlegomena unikaler Wurzeln&nbsp;(Harrassowitz 2011),&nbsp;editor of&nbsp;Endless Inspiration: One Thousand and One Nights in Comparative Perspective&nbsp;(Gorgias 2020) and One Thousand and One Nights (Gale, 2027),&nbsp;and co-editor of Languages of Southern Arabia (Archaeopress, 2014) and New Directions in Digital Modern Languages Research&nbsp;(Liverpool University Press, 2023). https://www.st-andrews.ac.uk/modern-languages/people/arabic/oe2 &nbsp; Register please on this link: &nbsp; https://universityofexeter.zoom.us/meeting/register/fbHQXhbxSm6-9gtiDQ4ovQ#/registration749736
DTSTAMP:20260501T035158
DTSTART:20260504T170000
DTEND:20260504T183000
LOCATION:
SUMMARY;LANGUAGE=en-us:CSI Monday Majlis: Orhan Elmaz
UID:3e0a8399a2e087f0d18fa58c88635012@www.exeter.ac.uk
END:VEVENT
END:VCALENDAR
