RELI 4305 / 6305 (31809 / 11811
Muhammad: His Life and Legacy
RELI 4304 / 6304: Spring 2008 Professor: Kenneth Honerkamp
E-mail: hnrkmp@uga.edu
Office:
Rm. 201 Peabody Hall
Office hours: Mon., Wed. & Friday 11:30 to 12:30
or by appointment.
Classroom: Peabody Hall. room 201
Time: 9:05 - 9:55 Class: Mon. Wed. & Friday
COURSE DESCRIPTION
A historical and thematic study of the life of
Mohammed, the founder of the Islamic tradition. From his birth in 570 CE to his death in 633 CE. The course will include: (1) an in-depth introduction to the genre of hadith and sira literature; the major works, the history of its compilation and an evaluation of
various authors and their works, from the perspectives
of both Islamic and Western scholarship; (2) a biographical study of the life of Muhammad and the principles
that Muslims have gleaned from the example of his life; (3) an over view
of the aspect of the veneration of Muhammad within the Sufi
tradition of Islam as his legacy.
Muhammad, His
Life and Legacy has a twofold purpose. The first is to provide the student with essential material
on the life and legacy of Muhammad needed by anyone involved in research in the
Islamic World. The second goal is
to is to open a window for the student upon the ÒMuslim world viewÓ of Muhammad
as the exemplar of the Islamic norm
as perceived by Muslims themselves with an aim towards increasing our
understanding and appreciation of
wealth and cultural diversity of Islamic culture. It is also hoped that this view
through the Òwindow of the Muslim world viewÓ will provide the student with a
window from which to view his or her own world.
Texts: (1)
Lings, Muhammad his life based on the earliest sources, (LINGS.)
(2) Tariq Ramadan, Lessons from the Life of Muhammad (RAMADAN), and Course Packet for RELI 4305/6305
(CP), available at
Bel-JeanÕs. Supplementary
reading, (non-required) (1) Armstrong, Muhammad, A Biography
of the Prophet, (2) Cleary, The Wisdom of the
Prophet, (WP), (3) Nawawi, Forty Hadith, (on-line downloadable).
Format: The class will be conducted with a
combination of lecture and full classroom discussion.
REQUIREMENTS:
A
UGA/MyID ACCOUNT, you must try to
logon to WebCT this week. If you
are unsuccessful, e-mail me. Note
that the only valid e-mail address you can use for WebCT is our UGA MyID. Actual WebCT entries will begin in two
weeks, I will let you know.
WEEKLY READING ASSIGNMENTS: Read the assigned readings from the texts and the text
package as listed in the READING SCHEDULE located in the Course Packet. Be prepared for pop-quizzes and
discussions on the material in the readings.
MIDTERM: One
midterm given on Wednesday, March 5rd. The exam will cover the historical study of the Sira
sources, the life of Muhammad until and including the material on BANU QAYNUQA
and the required readings in In the Footsteps of the Prophet. No
makeup will be given without a dean's or doctor's excuse. If you do obtain such an excuse, you
have one week after you return to make up the exam.
FINAL:
The final will be given in accordance with the Finals Schedule. The final will cover a general overview
of MuhammadÕs life focusing on the Medinan Period and reading material from the
second half of the course packet.
If you are not able to take the final exam you will receive a zero for
the exam. An incomplete for the
course can only be given if you have a dean's or doctor's excuse. Both the midterm and the final will
largely consist of fill in the blank and short answer questions. The final exam will include between 1
and 3 essay questions that will have time to prepare prior to the final exam.
ATTENDANCE: Attendance is obligatory.
Three unexcused absences will be reason for a 10 percent decrease in the
total grade in this course.
WRITING ASSIGNMENTS (Due on the week after they
are assigned)
You will be asked to write six academic summaries on assigned readings and to review the book In the Footsteps
of the Prophet: Lessons from the Life of Muhammad, by Tariq Ramadan. Each summary will include your own reactions to the text and
your opinion of the textÕs relevance to the subject matter. Each summary will be at least
five pages, 1.5 spacing in a number 12 font). These will be turned in to the Teaching Assistant as
required. Evaluation will be
on a Ò20 percent basisÓ which means I will check 20 percent of the writing
assignments on a weekly basis and assign a final grade based on the ten that I
have been able to read carefully.
Summaries that I have not read will be checked off on a done/not done
basis (GRACE RULING: you
can miss one summary and still get full credit for this requirement as long as
I have evaluated 4 of your summaries plus the book review). Summaries will be graded over 20 points
and will be evaluated on completeness of content, order and academic analysis
(how is the article relevant to the study of the MuhammadÕs life?). The
texts designated for academic summaries are marked on the reading schedule with
an asterisk (*).
Make sure to include the NAME OF THE ARTICLE, NUMBER
OF READING, DATE OF ASSIGNMENT, and YOUR NAME at the top of each summary.
Do
one journal posting per week to be posted on the course WebCT discussion forum
site that I will set up. Each
entry must be posted by the Friday of the week it is supposed to deal
with. In the subject box for the
posting of your message, write your last name and a brief title of your
posting.
The form of the entry should be numbered as in the
following five sections. Make sure
you leave a space between each section!
1)
number and date of the posting
2)
name of the article, chapter, and page number of the quote
Then
in the body of your entry:
3) type the quote you are addressing in your posting
(be exact) that was the most interesting to you in the section you read. If the passage is longer than a
paragraph, either summarize it in detail, or choose a substantial portion for
your posting.
4)
explain in your own words the meaning of the quote
5)
explain in detail why it interested you.
DO NOT UPLOAD YOUR POSTINGS AS AN ATTACHMENT!! FIRST DO THEM ON A WORD PROCESSOR, THEN
COPY AND PASTE THEM INTO THE APPROPRIATE FORUM.
ONLINE RESPONSES
B)
Using the WebCT Bulletin Board, respond thoughtfully to at least two entries of
other students per forum. (You may
post your responses to your fellow students until the Friday of the following
week.) You may post and/or respond
to as many entries as you wish, but one posting and two responses are the
minimum. If one of your fellow
studentÕs posting has already received four responses, choose another student
to respond to.
Note on grading criteria for items A and B: As long
as you complete the requirements; i.e. doing your postings and discussion
entries on time and clearly indicating that you have put some effort and
thought into the assignments, you will receive an ÒAÓ (25% of the final
grade). To the degree that the
instructions are not followed and to the extent that it is obvious to me that
not too much effort and thought has been put into the assignments, your grade
will decrease. For example,
responses such as, ÒI agreeÓ or ÒAwesome quoteÓ or ÒThis quote echoes my
feelingsÓ will not receive credit.
The writing TA will be responsible for all on-line work, if you have any
questions please direct them at him.
N.B Journal entries will be open to all textual material read throughout the semester including the Course Packet and (The Life of Muhammad by Lings and In the Footsteps of the Prophet by Tariq Ramadan). It is hoped however that you will focus on the life of Muhammad and In the Footsteps of the Prophet when we reach this part of the course.
GRADING : Academic Summaries 25 %, Book Review
10%, Postings and online discussion - 20%, Mid-term - 20% and Final 25% . Grading will be on a curve.
- WRITING ASSIGNMENT
WEEKLY
WRITING ASSIGNMENTS: There is no
length limit for graduate students. Weekly summaries may be longer if the text
requires it.
1) ÒMuhammad, the
Prophet of Islam,Ó from the Encyclopaedia of Islam
2) The
Development of Exegesis in Early Islam,
by Herbert Berg (identify the major scholars in the debate outlined in this
work, their dates and views)
3) ÒThe Question of the Authenticity of Muslim Traditions Reconsidered: A Review ArticleÓ by Harald Motzki
MEMORIZATION: Memorize 5 short Hadith.
If you cannot read Arabic, then memorize them in English with the names of the
narrators.
BIBLIOGRAPHY: Prepare an annotated/subject specific bibliography on the the Life of
Muhammad and/or material related to sira and the early history of Islam
including articles and chapters from anthologies. This will be a joint grad-student project. Present the instructor with your topic
headings before starting work.
Formatting will be as stipulated by Prof.
SOME
SUGGESTED TOPICS (or by individual choice of graduate student)
Authenticity and Formative Islam
The Meccan Period (from Hira to Hijra)
Early figures of the meccan period
Early Martyrs
The
Madinan Period (from Hijra to MuhammadÕs death)
Early
figures in the Madinian period
MuhammadÕs
wives
Jihad
in the Sunna and Sira material
The
Jews of Madina
The
Quran and the life of Muhammad
The Truce
of Hudaybiyya to the Conquest of Mecca
The
MirÕraj and its literature
Shariah
and Sira
Muhammad
as a statesman and politician
Muhammad
and Jesus comparative studies
Muhammad
and Moses comparative studies
Governance
in the early community
Human
rights in the early community
REGULAR
MEETINGS: Meet every two weeks with
professor Honerkamp as a group, question/answer sessions, and in-depth
discussions of reading from course packet. I may suggest topics for these meetings.
Changes to this Syllabus and Reading Schedule
The
instructor reserves the right to make any changes to this syllabus. Changes will be announced in class and
posted on WebCT. This will also be
true of the reading schedule; flexibility is a key to understanding and should
be allowed for in all affairs of daily living.
THE COURSE SYLLABUS IS A GENERAL PLAN FOR THE
COURSE; DEVIATIONS ANNOUNCED TO THE CLASS BY THE INSTRUCTOR MAY BE NECESSARY.
from the Book of Sufi Wisdom by Ibn At‰ÕAllah
This
course will abide strictly by the standards of academic honesty set forth in
the University of Georgia publication ÒA Culture of HonestyÓ
Policy
on Academic Honesty
RELI 4305/6305 MUHAMMAD: HIS LIFE AND LEGACY
Reading and Writing Schedule
- JANUARY 7 First
day of classes: Introduction to course Life/Heritage
Syllabus
/ course packet / Reading Schedule
Sira
and Maghazi Literature
- JANUARY 9 Sira and Maghazi Literature (continued)
Introduction
to the Life of Muhammad
COURSE
PKT: introductory material
-
M. HartÕs article on Muhammad
- JANUARY 11 Sira and Maghazi
Literature (continued)
COURSE
PKT:
ÒMuhammadÓ by G.
Eaton ( also prepare for questions
and discussion)
Martin Lings and Tariq Ramadan
- JANUARY 14 LINGS: The House of God to The Desert pp. 1 - 22
COURSE
PKT: (writing assignment # 1)
* ÒThe Authenticity of Prophetic Hadith: a Pseudo-problem,Ó Wael
Hallaq (prepare for questions and discussion)
- JANUARY 18 LlNGS: The Desert to First Revelations (23 - 42)
RAMADAN: Birth and Education (9 –18)
- JANUARY 21 Martin Luther KingÕs Birthday
- JANUARY 23 LINGS: The First Revelations (42 - 45)
COURSE PKT:
- Qadi Ayyad - Ash-Shifa
- JANUARY 25 LINGS: Worship to Quraysh Take Action (46 -51)
RAMADAN:
Revelation, Knowledge (29
- 36)
- JANUARY 28 RAMADAN: The Message and Adversity, (37 –
44)
LINGS: Quraysh Take Action , (52 – 55)
- JANURAY 30 LINGS: Aws and Khazraj to Wonderment (56 –
63)
RAMADAN: The Message and Adversity, (44 –
49)
- FEBRUARY 4 LINGS: Leaders of Quraysh to The Hour (64
– 74)
COURSE
PKT: (writing assignment # 2)
* ÒThe Prophet Muhammad as a Teacher: Implications for Hadith Literature,Ó (71-86)
(also prepare for questions and discussion)
- FEBRUARY 6 LINGS: The Hour to Abyssinia (75 – 80)
RAMADAN: Resistance, Humility and Exile (51-58)
- FEBRUARY 8 LINGS: Abyssinia to The Ban and Its Ann É (81 – 87)
RAMADAN: Resistance, Humility and Exile (59
– 62)
- FEBRUARY 11 LINGS: Tbe Ban to The Light Thy É (89 -100)
RAMADAN: Trials, Elevation, and Hopes (63 –
70)
- FEBRUARY 13 LINGS: The Light of Thy Countenance, (101 - 104)
RAMADAN: The Night Journey, (70 – 74)
- FEBRUARY 15 LINGS: After the Year of Sadness to Yathrib (105 - 112)
RAMADAN: Trials, Elevation, and Hopes, ( 74
– 79
- FEBRUARY 7 LINGS: ÒThe Light of ...Ó to Conspiracy, pp.
101 - 115
COURSE
PKT: (writing assignment # 3)
*ÒHijra
as History and Metaphor,Ó D. Casewit
- FEBRUARY 18 LINGS: Many Emigrations to Harmony and (113
– 124)
RAMADAN: Hijrah (81 – 95)
COURSE
PKT:
-
The Pact of Madina (prepare questions)
- FEBRUARY 20 RAMADAN: Hijrah (81 – 95)
LINGS:
Harmony and Discord to
Threshold (125 – 135)
- FEBRUARY 22 LINGS: The Threshold of War to Badr (135
– 145)
COURSE PKT:
-
The Verse of the Sword (prepare questions)
RAMADAN: Madina, Life and War (95 – 100)
COURSE PKT:
- Quranic verses: Change of Qibla (read and prepare questions)
- FEBRUARY 25 LINGS: The Battle of Badr (146 – 152)
RAMADAN: A Caravan & Battle of Badr, (100
– 105)
- FEBRUARY 26 LINGS: The Return to The Captives (153 –
159)
RAMADAN: In Mecca, in Madina (105 – 107)
- FEBRUARY 29 LINGS: Bani Qaynuqa (160 –162)
RAMADAN: Banu Qaynuqa (107 - 109
- MARCH 3 REVIEW
FOR MID-TERM
-
MARCH 5 WEDNESDAY - MID-TERM EXAM
-
MARCH 7 LINGS: Bani Qaynuqa (160 –162)
RAMADAN: Banu Qaynuqa (107 – 109
COURSE PKT: (writing assignment # 4)
Read sections from Qadi AyyadÕs - Ash-Shifa
2)
On the Necessity of Loving the Prophet
Write a summary of his style, methodology, and what you think is the goal of these chapters. Who do you think this is addressed to? (Due March 21st )
have a great spring
break !
-
MARCH 17 LINGS:
Deaths and Marriaages (163 –166)
RAMADAN: Teachings (111 – 117)
-
MARCH 19 LINGS: The
People of the Bench (167 –169)
COURSE
PKT: (writing assignment # 5)
*ÒThe Light of Muhammad,Ó A. Schimmel, (also prepare for
discussion and questions)
-
MARCH 21 LINGS:
Desultory Warfare to March
(170 –179)
RAMADAN: A Daughter a Wife (117 – 122)
-
MARCH 24 LINGS: The
Battle of Uhud (180 –188)
RAMADAN: Uhud to A Defeat (122 – 127)
-
MARCH 26 LINGS: Revenge
to After Uhud (189 –198)
-
MARCH 28 LINGS:
Victims of Revenge to Peace (199 –205)
RAMADAN: Tricks and Treason (129 – 133)
-
MARCH 31 LINGS:
Peace and War to The Trench (206 –214)
RAMADAN: Excellence and Singularity (133 –
136)
-
APRIL 2 LINGS: The Trench to Bani Qurayzah (215 –229)
RAMADAN: The Confederates to A Trick (136 –
142)
-
APRIL 4 LINGS: Bani Qurayzah to The Hypocrites (229
–235)
RAMADAN: A Trick to Banu Qurayza (142 –
145)
COURSE
PKT (reading assingment #6)
1)
- Read Bani
Qurayzah article
2)
- Read KisterÕs response (prepare to discuss)
-
APRIL 7 LINGS: The Hypocrites to The Dilemma (237
–246)
RAMADAN: Zaynab and Abu al-As (146 – 148)
-
APRIL 9 LINGS: The Dilemma of Quraysh to É (247 –256)
RAMADAN: A Dream, Peace (149 – 156)
-
APRIL 11 LINGS: After Hudaybiyah (257 –262)
RAMADAN: Spirituality and Victory (156 –
162)
-
APRIL 14 LINGS: Khaybar (263 –269)
RAMADAN: Khaybar (162 – 163)
-
APRIL 16 LINGS: ÒWhom Lovest Thou MostÓ (270 –279)
RAMADAN: Coming Home to the Lesser ... (165
– 170)
-
APRIL 18 LINGS: The Lesser Pilgrimage (280 –285)
RAMADAN: Umrah and Mutah (170 – 174)
-
APRIL 21 LINGS: Deaths to Qaynuqa
(286 –296)
RAMADAN: The Covenant is Broken (174 – 176)
- APRIL
23 LINGS: The Conquest of Mecca (297 –303)
RAMADAN: Coming Back (176 – 179)
DEADLINE FOR THE BOOK REVIEW OF IN
THE FOOTSTEPS
-
APRIL 25 LINGS: Hunayn to end of Book (304 –345)
RAMADAN: In History, for Eternity (211 –
216)
(prepare
to discuss)
- APRIL 28 LAST DAY OF CLASSES REVIEW FOR FINAL
Remember, you have all
become informed members of the ongoing discussion of what Islam is and what it
is not.
Please, do not take this responsibility lightly.
Have a great summer!