Islamic History at BSC - An Interview With Keith Lewinstein

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Bridgewater Review

Volume 26 | Issue 2

Article 9

Dec-2007

Islamic History at BSC: An Interview with Keith


Lewinstein
Andrew C. Holman
Bridgewater State College, [email protected]

Keith Lewinstein
Bridgewater State College, [email protected]

Recommended Citation
Holman, Andrew C. and Lewinstein, Keith (2007). Islamic History at BSC: An Interview with Keith Lewinstein. Bridgewater Review,
26(2), 19-21.
Available at: http://vc.bridgew.edu/br_rev/vol26/iss2/9

This item is available as part of Virtual Commons, the open-access institutional repository of Bridgewater State University, Bridgewater, Massachusetts.

Islamic History at BSC


An Interview with Keith Lewinstein

Last Fall, the Bridgewater Review caught up with Dr. Keith


Lewinstein, Associate Professor in the Department of History,
to ask him some questions about his research and teaching at
Bridgewater State College. Dr. Lewinstein has been a member
of the History Department at BSC since September 2003
and has served on the Colleges Undergraduate Curriculum
Committee. Currently, he is the Director of Graduate and
Continuing Education in the Department of History. Dr.
Lewinstein was interviewed by Dr. Andrew Holman, the
Associate Editor of the Review.
BR: How would you define or describe
your specific field of scholarly
research?
KL: I work in early Islamic history and
that means the 7th to 11th centuries, the
period when Islamic civilization first
crystallized. My own interests run to
religious literature. I have done work
on theological and legal writings and
Im interested in the ways in which
Islam as a religious tradition went
through its formative period as Muslims
created for themselves a distinctive
religious identity.
BR: How and when did you first
become interested in the study of
Islamic history?
KL: When I was an undergraduate at
Berkeley, I had the good fortune to take a
course with a very distinguished professor of medieval Islamic history. Nowadays, Islamic history classes (even pre-modern ones) are full, not just at
Berkeley but anywhere in the country. But when I took
it in the late 1970s, there were only 9 or 10 students in
the class. I got hooked on the subject for a couple reasons. First, it was something I knew absolutely nothing
about when I started, so it was exciting for me to be able
to gauge how much I was learning. Second, although
I had expected Islamic history to be exotic and different, in fact I found that many of the major themes one
encounters in European history (reason versus revelation, religion and state, and so forth) are also important
in the Islamic world. There was something familiar yet
different about it that I found very attractive.

BR: You have contributed articles and book


chapters and reviews to your field. What is the
piece of research or project that you would say youre
most proud of?
KL: Ive written on various topics, but I really do two
kinds of workone fairly technical and pitched narrowly to a small group of specialists, and the other more
open and accessible, and directed at scholars in other
fields who need to know something about Islam. I enjoy
doing both. But if you really pressed me, Id have to say
Im proudest of the technical work, because of the level

of philological skill and concentrated effort thats required. I enjoy taking apart classical Arabic texts, and
trying to figure out how they were actually composed
and what they tell us about how early Muslims came
to conceive of their identity.

Twelfth
Imam Shrine.
Samarra, Iraq.

BR: This is the heavy lifting of an historians work.


KL: Some of the books I work with are rather
heavy, yes.

Bridgewater Review
December 2007

19

Quran (Mamluk).

islamic history at BSC An interview with keith lewinstein

BR: You are currently working on a book for


Cambridge University Press. Can you tell us something about that project?
KL: The book is on heresy and dissent in the early
Islamic world. What I am trying to do is get beyond the
narrow technical compass I usually work within and
look at heresy more broadly as a social as well as intellectual phenomenon. I want to understand the way
in which heresy was disseminated in the early Islamic
worldthe mechanics through which these kinds of
ideas spread and appealed to different sorts of groups in
different parts of the Muslim world. To put it another
way, Im trying to describe why certain teachings came
to be seen as unacceptableas heterodoxdespite the
absence of a church with the authority to define orthodoxy. The book traces how orthodox and heterodox
labels evolved during the first few centuries of Islam.
BR: What are the particular challenges that you face
as a scholar of early Islamic history?
KL: Anyone hoping to understand how Islam emerged
and took shape has to rely not on contemporary
documents (we dont really have them) but on literary
sources composed after the fact. What we have in these
classical texts is a picture of how Muslims later came
to understand their historya classically accepted
narrativeand we have to be especially sensitive to the
nature of our sources if we want to use them to write
history. We dont have archives with tax registers or
census figures, for example; we have textual traditions
which have to be approached with a certain literary
sensibility.
BR: Was the tenor or tone of scholarly study in your
field altered by 9/11?
KL: No, I wouldnt say so, except in the sense that
scholars even in the early Islam field are now being
called on more often than in the past to address contemporary issues. If the 9/11 attacks had been couched
in leftist revolutionary or nationalist rhetoric, I dont
imagine too many people would be terribly interested
in my opinion about them. But because the rhetoric
is Islamicand the ideology is what we now call
Islamistthose of us who read in the Islamic tradition (even in the early period) find ourselves invited to
more public events. Since arriving at BSC Ive appeared
on several different panels addressing contemporary
issues in the Muslim world; since I dont generally work
on such issues myself, my contribution has usually been
to offer historical context.

BR: Would you say that most of your colleagues


that is, historians of Islamfind this new milieu
an opportunity or a burden?
KL: For me its an opportunity, especially when it
comes to teaching. I cant speak for others.
BR: Last Spring you presented a paper at a CART
forum on campus called Was Muhammad the Final
Prophet? The presentation drew a pretty large
crowd of professors and students. Why does your
subject appeal so broadly?
KL: I think for obvious reasons a lot of people these
days want to know something about Muhammad
and the Quran. Theres so much misinformation out
there and even a lot of disinformation. It might also
be that some of our colleaguesparticularly those in
the social sciences and the humanitiesfeel that one
should know something about that part of the world. I
think the discussion we had was spirited and usefulat
least for me. The substance of the presentation (why
Muslims came to insist on Muhammad as the final
prophet) will find its way into my book in a chapter on
the early Gnostic prophet movements in southern Iraq.

BR: You have been a student and a teacher at some


pretty prestigious institutions in the U.S. (Berkeley,
Princeton, Smith and Brown). What has been your
experience of researching and teaching Islamic
history at Bridgewater State College? Are the rewards and challenges greater or fewer? Or are
they just different?
KL: The challenges are great everywhere, mainly
because this is brand new stuff for a lot of people. Most
students are like I was: they know next to nothing
when they first come into a class on Islamic history.
For teachers, starting at zero means that you have to
explain the simplest things, even the way names work,
to ensure that students dont get lost in some of the
assigned reading. One thing that has made teaching
Islam easier (and this is a way my field has changed
over the past 25 years) is textbooks. When I first started
studying, when I took that first class at Berkeley, there
werent many texts written for undergraduates. What
we were reading was scholarship written by specialists
for specialists (or at least for more advanced students),
and we were expected to be able to tap into that and
get what we could out of it. Nowadays, there are many
more introductory-level books and articles available,
and naturally I remind my students at every turn that
they have it a lot easier than I did!
One thing I particularly enjoy about my job here is
that Im the only Middle Eastspecialist in a History
Department, rather than one of several people in a Near
Eastern Studies department stocked with other specialists.This means I have responsibility for the entirety
of Middle East/Islamic history, rather than simply my
own small corner of it. Id never get to teach a course,
say, on modern Egypt or Iran if there were specialists on
those subjects around.
BR: And challenges or rewards as a researcher
at BSC?
KL: Well, I have been fortunate to receive funding for
several specific research projects. The biggest challenge
that Iwe allface is an extraordinary teaching load.
When you do this kind of scholarly work, you need
large blocs of time to sit and read and think, to say
nothing of writing. I am amazed to see what some of
our colleagues have managed to produce given their
teaching loads. I find that time constraints are the biggest challenge.

BR: Are there particular strategies or techniques that


you employ when teaching Islamic history to students
at Bridgewater State College?
KL: I try different things in different classes. In my
course on the Muslim tradition, for example, I try to get
my students inside the minds of religious scholars by
having them produce a fatwa, a response to a religiolegal question.I give them a large quantity of translated
material from the Quran, the Tradition of the Prophet,
and the Muslim legal tradition, and ask them to apply it to a specific question a contemporary Muslim
might ask.I ask a different question (and give different
sources) every year. In my experience, an exercise like
this gives students a much more concrete sense of what
religious scholars actuallydo. This is more than what
students can otherwise get from simply reading a textbook chapter on Islamic law, even though they do read
some secondary literature. This sort of exercise gives
them a lesson they wont soon forget in the complexity
and the malleability of sacred law.
BR: There has been some preliminary administrative work done on campus (particularly by your
colleague in Communications Studies, Dr. Jabbar
al-Obaidi) to establish an interdisciplinary program
in Middle East Studies. In what ways would such a
thing affectand perhaps benefityour work here
on campus?
KL: I like the idea of Middle East Studies having more
visibility on campus. It means that students who decide
to take a course on a Middle Eastern subject might
actually end up taking more than one or two, or even
doing a minor in the subject. Personally, I want to have
students who have taken courses with Dr. Obaidi or
Dr. St-Laurent, because they make interesting connections and that makes my own work in the classroom
more rewarding.
Keith Lewinstein is Associate Professor of History.

Bridgewater Review
December 2007

21

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