ebook img

arabic and islamic studies arabic with an additional language PDF

101 Pages·2014·0.49 MB·English
by  
Save to my drive
Quick download
Download
Most books are stored in the elastic cloud where traffic is expensive. For this reason, we have a limit on daily download.

Preview arabic and islamic studies arabic with an additional language

F O S ACULTY OF RIENTAL TUDIES U O NIVERSITY OF XFORD ARABIC AND ISLAMIC STUDIES ARABIC WITH AN ADDITIONAL LANGUAGE A Handbook for Final Honours School To be examined in Trinity Term 2014 ACADEMIC YEAR 2012–13 1 ACADEMIC YEAR 2012 -13 DATES OF FULL TERM Michaelmas Term Monday 8th November – Friday 30th November 2012 Hilary Term Monday 14th January – Friday 8th March 2013 Trinity Term Monday 22nd April – Friday 14 June 2013 2 CONTENTS Preparation for the Final Honour School (FHS) 7 Teaching 7 Public Examinations 9 Courses Outline Arabic and Islamic Studies 13 Arabic with an additional language 15 Papers in Islamic Studies Ar. 1 Arabic Unprepared Translation into English and Comprehension 18 Ar.2 Composition inArabic 20 Ar.3 Spoken Arabic 21 Ar.4 Arabic Literature 22 Ar.5 Islamic History, 570-1500 24 Ar.6 Islamic Religion 25 Ar. 7 Arabic Further Subject 27 i. Hadith 29 ii. Early Islamic Monetary History 30 iii. Classical Arabic Literary Texts 31 iv. The Ethos of theJahiliyya inthe Mu‘allaqa ofImru’al-Qays 32 v. Early Islamic Historiography 34 vi. Aspects of Islamic Art, Architecture and Archaeology 35 vii. Muslims andChristians in Sicily, 827-1246 38 viii. The Rise of the Sufi Orders in the Islamic World, 1200-1500 40 ix. S u f i s m 42 x. [Until 1 October 2013: al-Ghazali, Munqidh] [From 43 October 2013: al-Ghazali] 3 xi. Ibn Tufayl,HayyibnYaqzan 43 xii Ibn al-‘Arabi, Fusus al-hikam 43 xiii Religion and Politics during the Mongol Period 44 xiv. Ottoman State and Society 1566-1700 46 xv. History of the Middle East in the Late Ottoman Age, 1750-1882 47 xvi. A Modern Islamic Thinker (e.g. Sayyid Qutb, Moahmmad Talbi, Rashid Rida) 48 xvii. Modern Arabic Literature 49 xviii. Arabic Vernacular Literature, 1900 tothe Present Day 50 xix. Society andCulture in theModern Arab World 51 xx [Until 1 October 2013: History of Jewish-Muslim Relations] [From 1 October 2013: The Biography of Mohammad] 57 xxi. A short-term Further Subject, as approved by the Board of the Faculty of Oriental Studies and publicized in the Arabic Handbook (t.b.c.) 4 Ar. 8/9 Arabic Special Subject 58 i. [Until 1 October 2013: Qur’anic Commentary [From 1 61 October 2013: Qur’an] ii. Themes in Classical Arabic Literature 62 iii. The Transformation of Ideas from the Jahiliyya to Early Islam in Early Arabic Poetry 63 iv. Topics in Islamic Law 65 v. Learning and Culture in Baghdad, 800-900 66 vi. [Until 1 October 2013: The Graeco-Arabic Translation Movement] [From 1 October 2013: Theology and Philosophy in the Islamic World] 66 vii. [Until 1 October 2013: vii. The Rise of kalam viii. The Rise of falsafa] 67 ix. [xii.] Medieval Sufi Thought 67 x. [viii.] Ibn al-‘Arabi 67 xi. [iv.] “Slave Dynasties” in Islam: From the Ghaznavids to the Mamluk Sultanate 68 xii. [x.]Royal Art and Architecture in Norman Sicily 70 xiii. [xi.] Islamic Art and Archaeology c. 550- c. 1900 73 (Currently: Architectural Landmarks of the Islamic World) xiv. [xii.] Writing Islamic History, 1250-1500: From Palaeography to Historiography 75 xv. [xiii.] The Ottomans, Islam and the Arab World 1300–1566 77 xvi. [xiv.] History of the Middle East in the Age of Empire, 1882-1971 (In process of change to focus on Arab-Israel relations) 78 xvii. [xv.] Arabic Linguistics 79 xviii [xvi.] Themes in Modern Arabic Literature 81 xix. [xvii.] Modern Islamic Thought in the Middle East 83 xx. [xviii.] Popular Culture and Mass Media, 1930 to the Present 83 xxi. [xix.] A Short-term Special Subject, as approved by the Board of the Faculty of Oriental Studies and publicized in the Arabic Handbook (t.b.c.) 5 Teaching Staff 84 Appendix I: Guidelines forWriters of Theses 88 Appendix II:Regulations Relating to the useof IT facilities 94 Appendix III: Academic integrity: Good practice in citation, and avoidance of plagiarism 100 6 Preparation for the Final Honour School (FHS) During your last two years you will be preparing for the papers which constitute the final examination (FHS). It is this examination alone which determines your degree result (or “class”). You will divide your time in these two years between language work to enhance the fluency and accuracy of your comprehension and expression, and the study of the literature, history and culture associated withyour chosen language. The detailed reading of a selection of prescribed texts is a key part of all courses, and gives you direct access to the conceptual world of this language, whether past or present. Within each course there are certain elements of choice: in the case of Arabic with Islamic Studies, a Further Subject, a Special Subject (which is examined as two papers in Schools) and a thesis; in the case of Arabic with an additional Language, you do not do a Further or Special Subject, but you may choose to do an optional thesis. The date by which application to the Faculty Board for the approval of all such options has to be made is “Monday of the sixth week of Hilary Term in the academic year preceding that in which the examination is taken” – normally Year 3. The final examinations take place in Trinity Term of Year 4 (see section below on Public Examinations). Your time during this term is mainly your own for revision, although language classes continue in order to keep your skills in trim, and tutorials can also be arranged if and when you need them. TEACHING FHS. In Years 3 and 4, you should expect to have approximately 4-5 hours of language tuition, 6-8 hours of lectures or classes, and 1-2 hours of tutorials per week. Several of the weekly classes will be devoted to the study of your prescribed texts (“set texts”), and you will be expected to prepare the appropriate section of text in advance. Michaelmas and Hilary Terms of Year 3 tend to be quite heavy, while Trinity Term of Year4 is light and reserved mostly for revision. The subjects and hours of all lectures, classes and seminars appear in the Oriental Studies lecture list, which is posted prominently in the foyer of the Institute at the beginning of each term; versions are also available online. The location of lectures and classes in the Institute is posted on the white board in the foyer. Time permitting, you are encouraged to attend lectures outside the Institute, in other faculties, etc. 7 The following chart shows which papers are normally taught when: Year 3 Michaelmas Hilary Trinity Papers 1-3 (Arabic lang.) Papers 1-3 (Arabic lang.) Papers 1-3 (Arabic lang.) Paper 4(Arabic lit.) Paper 4(Arabic lit.) Paper 6(Islamic Religion) Paper 5 (Islamic History) Paper 5(Islamic History) Paper 7 (Further Subject) Paper 6 (Islamic Religion) Year 4 Michaelmas Hilary Trinity Papers 1-3 (Arabic lang.) Papers 1-3 (Arabic lang.) Papers 1-3 (Arabic lang.) Papers 8 & 9(Special sub.) Paper 10 (Thesis) Revision Tutorials. For every term of Years 3 and 4, you will be assigned a tutor or tutors who will guide your studies in a specialist or general manner. Tutorial lists are drawn up at the beginning of each term. If you are not duly notified, something has gone wrong; contact the Subject Co-ordinator (Tutorial Secretary). Each week, your tutor will assign you work, normally a passage of text for study, an essay topic for which specific reading is set, or a “prose” (a passage of English to be translated into your language of study). You must then prepare the text or write the essay or translation for discussion at an arranged tutorial in the following week. It is through the directed reading, textual study, essay writing, translation and discussion involved in classes and tutorials that you will gain essential understanding of your subject. Tutors submit written reports to your college on your progress at the end of each term, and sooner if necessary, and these reports will be discussed with you by your college tutor or other officers of the college. Collections. In addition to FHS, you may also be given “collections” by your teachers in the Institute, usually on the Friday or Saturday of0th Week; these are informal examinations, usually intended to test your command of material covered during the previous term. What to do if something goes wrong... Inevitably, things do sometimes go wrong. You, your teachers, or both may be at fault but, tempting though it is to apportion blame, it is far more important to act quickly to resolve the problem. You have two avenues through which you may do so. In your college, consult your Advisor or Moral Tutor, and ask her or him to help you. In the Institute, talk to your tutor(s), to your course co-ordinator (see below), to the Subject Co-ordinator (Tutorial Secretary) for your language, and - if your problem is a general one - discuss it with your fellow students and raise it at the Joint Consultative Committee (see above). 8 Subject Co-ordinator (Tutorial Secretary) and IWSG Convenor 2012-13. Co-ordinator: Dr Nadia Jamil Convenor, Islamic World Subject Group and JCC: Dr Christopher Melchert P E UBLIC XAMINATIONS GENERAL The final examinations – FHS - are, for the most part, sat in the . Examination Schools in the High Street. You will be informed in writing, some weeks in advance, of the dates and times and venues of your examinations. You must attend wearing subfusc, the precise definition of which is made clear in a letter sent to you by the Chairman of Examiners in advance of the Examination. The book called Examination Regulations (usually referred to simply as “the Grey Book”) is the final authority on the scope and conduct of examinations. It is updated annually. Interim or emergency changes maybe entered, first, in the University Gazette, and included in the online version of the Regulations, which you must therefore be sure to consult. All first-year undergraduates receive a copy of the current edition through their college when they first arrive. If any changes to the regulations governing the course upon which you have entered are made while you are still on course, you will be fully informed. In such an event you have the right to be examined under the old regulations if you so wish. Copies of past papers for all examinations in Oriental Studies are available in the Institute library. They may also be accessed online via www.ox.ac.uk: Current students OXAM Ð Oxford Exam Papers Online. In the event of a paper which is being set for the first time, or in a markedly changed format, students will be supplied with a specimen paper to guide them in their preparation. The results of each Public Examination are posted in the Examination Schools on a date as soon as possible after the final meeting of examiners. As soon as the lists have gone up you can find out your result by telephoning the Examination Schools. Marks for the individual papers are not made public, but each candidate’s marks are communicated to the Senior Tutor of his/her college; you can ask your college for your marks if you wish. THE FINAL HONOUR SCHOOL usually consists of 10 papers, depending on the course, and this total includes an oral examination in the (main) language of study. The written examination takes place towards the end of Trinity Term in Year 4. Syllabus. In the case of papers which are not linguistically or textually based, the title of a particular paper, as given in the Examination Regulations, is usually the only formal 9 definition of its scope. In such papers there is always a wide choice of essay-type questions, and past papers are a good guide to the kind of topics that can be expected to occur. Where a paper is based wholly or partly upon a corpus of texts that have been prescribed for study (“set texts”), you should receive a list of those texts from the staff member(s) teaching you for that particular paper. A master copy is also updated and pubished in the relevant Handbook at the beginning of Hilary Term each year (not later than Friday of 3rd Week) for the examination in the following academic year. This is to allow the teaching staff to introduce different texts from time to time, but no changes are allowed, except with the express permission of the Faculty Board, after the above- mentioned date which is 16 months before the examination in question. Setting conventions. By about the middle of Hilary Term of your fourth year, the “setting conventions” for your FHS will be available on the Faculty’s website (www.orinst.ox.ac.uk). The conventions provide a detailed description of the format of each paper that you will be taking in the FHS. The description will include an indication of any subdivision of the paper into sections, the number and type (e.g. translation, commentary, essay) of questions to be asked, the number of questions that candidates are required to answer, and any rules governing the distribution of their choices between different sections of the paper. The object of the conventions is to assist candidates in organising their revision. The oral examination. This is usually held in 0th Week of Trinity Term of Year 4. For the format of the oral examination see Paper 3 (Spoken Arabic). Thesis. Theses have to be handed in by Friday of the 10th Week of Hilary Term of Year 4 early in the Easter Vacation). For further information see Appendix I: Final Honour School of Oriental Studies (Arabic and Islamic Studies): Guidelines for Writers of Theses. Viva. Very occasionally, in order to resolve a borderline result, a student is asked to attend a viva voce examination after the written papers have been assessed by the examiners. Vivas are conducted in the Oriental Institute, and candidates must attend wearing subfusc. Given that candidates may be examined by viva voce (oral examination), candidates should be prepared to travel to Oxford up until the final examiners’ meeting (normally by first week of July, but maybe later). In deciding to conduct a Viva, examiners and assessors should bear in mind that: 1. The reason for holding a Viva must be clear and is when examiners are otherwise unable to determine the class of the submitted papers. 2. A Viva must not be used as a means of assessing suspicions about possible 10

Description:
Arabic Unprepared Translation into English and Comprehension. 18. Ar.2 Composition inArabic. 20. Ar.3 Spoken Arabic. 21. Ar.4 Arabic Literature Arabic dialectology. The dialect geography and typology of the. Arab world: West v East; Bedouin v sedentary; major urban dialects ( Egypt; the Levant;
See more

The list of books you might like

Most books are stored in the elastic cloud where traffic is expensive. For this reason, we have a limit on daily download.