Justice, Punishment and the Medieval Muslim Imagination

Christian Lange (University of Edinburgh)

Justice, Punishment and the Medieval Muslim Imagination
Format
Hardback
Publisher
Cambridge University Press
Country
United Kingdom
Published
10 July 2008
Pages
302
ISBN
9780521887823

Justice, Punishment and the Medieval Muslim Imagination

Christian Lange (University of Edinburgh)

How was the use of violence against Muslims explained and justified in medieval Islam? What role did state punishment play in delineating the private from the public sphere? What strategies were deployed to cope with the suffering caused by punishment? These questions are explored in Christian Lange’s in-depth study of the phenomenon of punishment, both divine and human, in eleventh-to-thirteenth-century Islamic society. The book examines the relationship between state and society in meting out justice, Muslim attitudes to hell and the punishments that were in store in the afterlife, and the legal dimensions of punishment. The cross-disciplinary approach embraced in this study, which is based on a wide variety of Persian and Arabic sources, sheds light on the interplay between theory and practice in Islamic criminal law, and between executive power and the religious imagination of medieval Muslim society at large.

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