<p>For many Muslims there is an inseparable connection between sound and meaning particularly when it comes to Islamic verse and scripture. This provides fertile ground for a comparative study across traditions and forms. </p><p>Timur Yuskaev offers a meditation on the Qur’an and human sensibilities heard together in American Muslim sermons. Foregrounding sound poetry and music it is a cultural anthropology of the Qur’an carried out in conversation with colleagues in multiple disciplines including Religions in America Qur’anic Islamic Memory Communication and Sound Studies. The author draws upon the works of Mikhail Bakhtin Charles Long Mary Douglas and many others to hear mysticism in a homiletic symphony by Warith Deen Mohammed to sense the experience of the covenant in a three-minute ribbon-cutting speech by Aras Konjhodzic and to appreciate the Qur’anic musicality of a down-to-earth interfaith address by Sarah Sayeed. </p><p>A creative guide to an organic engagement with texts this book will be of particular interest to those studying scriptures and the Qur’an.</p>
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