Formulation of the Claim

Readings in the Qur’an assert that renewing the understanding of the Qur’an and Islam requires a historical reading

Explanation

The book builds its argument on the premise that renewing the reading of the Qur’an requires deconstructing inherited methods and expanding critical tools, because the Qur’an can only be understood if it is read as a symbolic and historical discourse that goes beyond reducing it to jurisprudence or closed theology. The reading therefore links the Qur’an as a foundational symbolic discourse whose reception changes and which is subjected to restriction and instrumentalization and the Qur’anic text between the stability of the corpus and the openness of meaning, and it shows how the Qur’anic corpus established community, meaning, and authority through an imaginative and symbolic energy inseparable from history. The argument extends to a critique of tradition, Orientalism, fundamentalism, and the modern state, as in critique of religion and Orientalism requires a historical-social method without prior judgments and critical modernity expands the field of thought in confronting fundamentalism and dogmatism, so that renewing religious thought becomes a liberation of reason and meaning, not a denial of religion. In the end, the book makes the Qur’an an open field for critical interpretation that balances the sacred, history, language, politics, and the human.