Formulation of the Claim

Arkoun holds that the Qur’an transforms local events into enduring symbols and narratives.

Explanation

This transformation does not treat the event as an isolated occurrence belonging only to its own time and place; rather, it raises it to the level of a general significance that exceeds its historical particularity. In this way, the report or incident becomes part of a symbolic construction that grants meaning and continuity.

In Arkoun’s thought, the importance of this transformation lies in the fact that the religious text does not merely record events; it reshapes them within a horizon that links the first experience to what remains capable of circulation across time. The Qur’anic narrative therefore becomes a mediator between history and meaning, not merely a direct transmission of what occurred.

Its Place in the Book’s Argument

This atom falls within the reading that sees the Qur’an as a text that reorganizes historical and factual material within a broader symbolic structure. It comes close to Arkoun’s theses on the formation of meaning in religious texts, and on the event’s movement from the level of report to the level of example and signification, in keeping with his interest in understanding how the sacred is constructed within history.

Limits of the Claim

This does not mean that the Qur’an abolishes history or separates events from their context; rather, it recasts them within a distinctive symbolic horizon. Nor should the atom be made to bear a general judgment about all the verses of the Qur’an or all its passages, because what is intended here is this aspect of representation and transformation in the presentation that is the subject of the page.

Brief Evidence Passage

“The following example: I shall cite this violent, inflamed passage in which a clearly political and social debate is raised, but it is quickly altered or transformed into a conflict between God and the human being, and is clothed in the garb of theological transcendence and all-encompassing universality. Here lies one of the basic characteristics of Qur’anic discourse: it is adept at that in every a”