This book is a wide-ranging and general
introduction to Islamic civilisation from its origins to the present
day. Writing in clear and non-technical language, Professor Savory's
contributors seek answers to broad and important questions: how did a
single civilisation develop in a multi-ethnic, multi-cultural region;
how did Islamic internationalism come to be translated into powerful
nationalist movements in modern times; how has the West been affected by
its continuing contact with Islam; what factors have threatened Islamic
civilisation in modern times, and is there a future for it at all. The
book begins with a section on the geographical, ethnic and linguistic
background of the Middle East, continues with an historical resume of
the Islamic period, and moves on to the core chapters on the religious,
philosophical and legal foundations of Islamic society and its
contributions to world civilisation in the fields of literature, art,
science and medicine. The time-scale covers the pre-Islamic, medieval
and modern periods, and care has been taken to draw out the implications
of the interaction between Christian West and Islamic East from the
Crusades down to the massive encroachment of the West upon the Muslim
world - at military, political, economic and cultural levels - in the
modern era. Introduction to Islamic Civilisation is based on a
successful series of adult-education programmes broadcast on Canadian
radio, organised by members of the Department of Islamic Studies at the
University of Toronto. The material has been revised and rewritten for
book publication and is offered as a genuinely introductory handbook on a
vital and fascinating subject.
Comes with a used greetings card dated 1980.