EBRAHIM
E.I. MOOSA joined Duke University in the fall of 2001. With
interests in Islamic thought, especially Islamic law, ethics,
theology and critical theory, Ebrahim Moosa is associate research
professor in the Department of Religion and co-director of the
Center for the Study of Muslim Networks. Prior to Duke, he spent
three years (1998-2001) as visiting professor at Stanford University,
California and prior to that he taught at the University of Cape
Town in his native South Africa. He has a PhD from the University
of Cape Town. He received his first degree, known as the alimiyya
degree, from Nadwatul Ulama, Lucknow, India where he received
extensive training in the traditional Islamic sciences. After
completing his studies in India, he worked as a journalist in
the United Kingdom for Arabia: The Islamic World Review and later
as staff writer for MEED (Middle East Economic Digest) and also
as a political writer for the Cape Times in South Africa. He joined
the teaching faculty in the Department of Religious Studies at
the University of Cape Town in 1989 and completed his doctoral
studies on the confluence of language and theology in the legal
thought of the 12th century Muslim thinker, Abu Hamid al-Ghazali
(d.1111). He is the author of many published essays in Islamic
thought ranging from issues in ethics and law, covering topics
such as human rights, women's rights, Muslim family law, medical
ethics, and political ethics, to historical studies that deal
with questions of Qur'an exegesis and medieval Islamic law and
philosophy. He is especially interested in the way religious traditions
encounter modernity and the way new conceptions of history and
culture dialogically engage with the Islamic heritage.
Recommended
Readings: