Featuring Fiqh: The Representation of Law in Egyptian Historical Dramas

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Featuring Fiqh : The Representation of Law in Egyptian Historical Dramas. / Skovgaard-Petersen, Jakob.

In: Middle East Law and Governance, 2023.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Skovgaard-Petersen, J 2023, 'Featuring Fiqh: The Representation of Law in Egyptian Historical Dramas', Middle East Law and Governance. https://doi.org/10.1163/18763375-20231347

APA

Skovgaard-Petersen, J. (2023). Featuring Fiqh: The Representation of Law in Egyptian Historical Dramas. Middle East Law and Governance. https://doi.org/10.1163/18763375-20231347

Vancouver

Skovgaard-Petersen J. Featuring Fiqh: The Representation of Law in Egyptian Historical Dramas. Middle East Law and Governance. 2023. https://doi.org/10.1163/18763375-20231347

Author

Skovgaard-Petersen, Jakob. / Featuring Fiqh : The Representation of Law in Egyptian Historical Dramas. In: Middle East Law and Governance. 2023.

Bibtex

@article{2b150a95a19f45b3af340217ec1009c6,
title = "Featuring Fiqh: The Representation of Law in Egyptian Historical Dramas",
abstract = "Although they may have learned the norms and practices of fiqh at home and in school, most Muslims have scant knowledge of the ways in which their religious laws and mores were practiced in pre-modern times. Indeed, when it comes to imagining and understanding the role of fiqh in earlier Muslim societies, many contemporary Muslims get their information through fictional treatments, particularly from films and television dramas. For Arab Muslims, the relevant medium here is the musalsal, the 30-episode Ramadan drama.This article is a preliminary investigation into the role of fiqh in Egyptian historical films and musalsalāt. Based on collected scenes of fiqh – judges passing sentences, muftis issuing fatwas, teachers instructing, and student discussions – it identifies the issues at stake and analyzes the style of argumentation, the exercise of authority, and the general image of a fiqh-based society created in films and dramas. While the fuqahāʾ only play a minor role in Egyptian film, they are prominent in Arabic historical and religious musalsalāt, often, but not exclusively, produced in Egypt. In these two genres, we have biopics of major religio-legal figures, such as the founders of the four legal schools, major theologians, 19th century reformers, and a few modern ʿulamaʾ.Tracing the evolving treatment of fiqh and fuqahāʾ from the early dramas of the 1980s up to today, this article focuses on the themes of judicial independence, justice for the poor, corruption, and the intellectual process behind rulings. It argues that, overall, the lesson of the musalsalāt is a positive one: Shariʿa works, authoritarian rule has the capacity to be enlightened, and the key to effective leadership is appointing the right people to govern, or judge. The article concludes by discussing these messages in a contemporary Egyptian setting.",
keywords = "Faculty of Humanities, fiqh, judge, TV dramas, Musalsalat,",
author = "Jakob Skovgaard-Petersen",
year = "2023",
doi = "10.1163/18763375-20231347",
language = "English",
journal = "Middle East Law and Governance",
issn = "1876-3367",
publisher = "Brill",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Featuring Fiqh

T2 - The Representation of Law in Egyptian Historical Dramas

AU - Skovgaard-Petersen, Jakob

PY - 2023

Y1 - 2023

N2 - Although they may have learned the norms and practices of fiqh at home and in school, most Muslims have scant knowledge of the ways in which their religious laws and mores were practiced in pre-modern times. Indeed, when it comes to imagining and understanding the role of fiqh in earlier Muslim societies, many contemporary Muslims get their information through fictional treatments, particularly from films and television dramas. For Arab Muslims, the relevant medium here is the musalsal, the 30-episode Ramadan drama.This article is a preliminary investigation into the role of fiqh in Egyptian historical films and musalsalāt. Based on collected scenes of fiqh – judges passing sentences, muftis issuing fatwas, teachers instructing, and student discussions – it identifies the issues at stake and analyzes the style of argumentation, the exercise of authority, and the general image of a fiqh-based society created in films and dramas. While the fuqahāʾ only play a minor role in Egyptian film, they are prominent in Arabic historical and religious musalsalāt, often, but not exclusively, produced in Egypt. In these two genres, we have biopics of major religio-legal figures, such as the founders of the four legal schools, major theologians, 19th century reformers, and a few modern ʿulamaʾ.Tracing the evolving treatment of fiqh and fuqahāʾ from the early dramas of the 1980s up to today, this article focuses on the themes of judicial independence, justice for the poor, corruption, and the intellectual process behind rulings. It argues that, overall, the lesson of the musalsalāt is a positive one: Shariʿa works, authoritarian rule has the capacity to be enlightened, and the key to effective leadership is appointing the right people to govern, or judge. The article concludes by discussing these messages in a contemporary Egyptian setting.

AB - Although they may have learned the norms and practices of fiqh at home and in school, most Muslims have scant knowledge of the ways in which their religious laws and mores were practiced in pre-modern times. Indeed, when it comes to imagining and understanding the role of fiqh in earlier Muslim societies, many contemporary Muslims get their information through fictional treatments, particularly from films and television dramas. For Arab Muslims, the relevant medium here is the musalsal, the 30-episode Ramadan drama.This article is a preliminary investigation into the role of fiqh in Egyptian historical films and musalsalāt. Based on collected scenes of fiqh – judges passing sentences, muftis issuing fatwas, teachers instructing, and student discussions – it identifies the issues at stake and analyzes the style of argumentation, the exercise of authority, and the general image of a fiqh-based society created in films and dramas. While the fuqahāʾ only play a minor role in Egyptian film, they are prominent in Arabic historical and religious musalsalāt, often, but not exclusively, produced in Egypt. In these two genres, we have biopics of major religio-legal figures, such as the founders of the four legal schools, major theologians, 19th century reformers, and a few modern ʿulamaʾ.Tracing the evolving treatment of fiqh and fuqahāʾ from the early dramas of the 1980s up to today, this article focuses on the themes of judicial independence, justice for the poor, corruption, and the intellectual process behind rulings. It argues that, overall, the lesson of the musalsalāt is a positive one: Shariʿa works, authoritarian rule has the capacity to be enlightened, and the key to effective leadership is appointing the right people to govern, or judge. The article concludes by discussing these messages in a contemporary Egyptian setting.

KW - Faculty of Humanities

KW - fiqh, judge, TV dramas, Musalsalat,

U2 - 10.1163/18763375-20231347

DO - 10.1163/18763375-20231347

M3 - Journal article

JO - Middle East Law and Governance

JF - Middle East Law and Governance

SN - 1876-3367

ER -

ID: 328019500