Best Seller
Paperback
$24.00
Published on May 24, 2016 | 256 Pages
The progenitor of “Muslim punk rock” and one of today’s freshest spiritual voices pushes back against the common assumption that the historic faiths have no occult or magical tradition in this richly learned historical and personal journey through the practice of magic in Islam.
Magic in Islam offers a look at magical and occult technologies throughout Muslim history, starting with Islam’s earliest and most canonical sources. In addition to providing a highly accessible introduction to magic as it is defined, practiced, condemned, and defended within Muslim traditions, Magic in Islam challenges common assumptions about organized religion.
Michael Muhammad Knight’s deeply original book fills a gap within existing literature on the place of magic in Islamic traditions and opens a new window on Islam for general readers and students of religion alike. In doing so, the book counters and complicates widespread perceptions of Islam, as well as of magic as it is practiced outside of European contexts.
Magic in Islam also challenges our view of “organized religions” as clearly defined systems that can be reduced to checklists of key doctrines, texts, and rules. As a result, Magic in Islam throws a monkey wrench into the conventions of the “intro to Islam” genre, threatening to flip popular notions of a religion’s “center” and “margins.”
Magic in Islam offers a look at magical and occult technologies throughout Muslim history, starting with Islam’s earliest and most canonical sources. In addition to providing a highly accessible introduction to magic as it is defined, practiced, condemned, and defended within Muslim traditions, Magic in Islam challenges common assumptions about organized religion.
Michael Muhammad Knight’s deeply original book fills a gap within existing literature on the place of magic in Islamic traditions and opens a new window on Islam for general readers and students of religion alike. In doing so, the book counters and complicates widespread perceptions of Islam, as well as of magic as it is practiced outside of European contexts.
Magic in Islam also challenges our view of “organized religions” as clearly defined systems that can be reduced to checklists of key doctrines, texts, and rules. As a result, Magic in Islam throws a monkey wrench into the conventions of the “intro to Islam” genre, threatening to flip popular notions of a religion’s “center” and “margins.”
Author
Michael Muhammad Knight
Michael Knight is the winner of a Henfield Foundation Award, Playboy magazine’s 1996 college fiction contest, and was included in Scribner’s Best of the Fiction Workshops Anthology for 1997. His stories have appeared in The Paris Review, Story, Virginia Quarterly Review, The Crescent Review, Shenandoah, and–most recently–The New Yorker and Esquire. He is the author of the critically acclaimed Dogfight and Other Stories (Plume). He lives in Charlottesville, Virginia, and Divining Rod is his first novel.
Learn More about Michael Muhammad KnightYou May Also Like
A Heart on Fire
Ebook
$0.99
One River, Many Wells
Paperback
$24.00
Job
Paperback
$10.00
The Essential Nostradamus
Paperback
$24.00
The Road to Walden
Paperback
$24.00
Reflections of the Christ Mind
Ebook
$6.99
Swedenborg
Paperback
$24.00
The Book of Contemplation
Paperback
$19.00
Wake up and Cook
Paperback
$24.00
×