Among Arabic Manuscripts

豆瓣
Among Arabic Manuscripts

登录后可管理标记收藏。

ISBN: 9789004316119
作者: I. Y. Kratchkovsky (Author),‎ Michael Kemper (Contributor)
出版社: Brill Academic Pub
发行时间: 2016
装订: Hardcover
价格: $400.07

/ 10

0 个评分

评分人数不足
借阅或购买

Memories of Libraries and Men (Brill Classics in Islam)

I. Y. Kratchkovsky (Author),‎ Michael Kemper (Contributor)   

简介

I.Y. Kratchkovsky (Ignatii Iul'ianovich Krachkovskii) was an iconic scholar.Among Arabic Manuscripts, Memories of Libraries and Men was a hugely influential book in its time, especially in Eastern Europe. It inspired several now-noted Arabists to start their studies in this field.
"There is much to interest the Arabic scholar in these reminiscences of a life working with Arabic texts. Kratchkovsky's comments on medieval manuscripts are punctuated by his modern epistolary relationships with early twentieth-century greats, such as Amin Rihani, Mikhail Naimy and the Taymur family of Egypt. This book was not intented to be a dry, scholarly tome but to create "propaganda for my branch of study" and have "these reflections find their way into the hearts and minds of my readers." What he produced is a paean to the enduring pleasures of scholarship, to the joy of making a new discovery in an old library and to the circle of people across the world who make it possible. Although on the surface there is an optimistic faith in human progress, a dark melancholy lies underneath. As Kemper's introduction reveals, Kratchkovsky did not live his life in an ivory idyll and frequently suffered from dark periods. Lurking in passing references throughout the text are the stories of students and colleagues killed in wars and Soviet purges. If there is a refuge for him, it is in writing. Soviet Russia during the Second World War must have felt like a precarious place where considering, for instance, the handwriting of Abba Antonius of Baghdad from the ninth century was a comfort. More than anything, this is a book about (hand)writing and its endurance. It is propaganda as it should be." Raphael Cormack in Times Literary Supplement, October 26 2016.

短评
评论
笔记