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Module Specifications.

Current Academic Year 2024 - 2025

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Date posted: September 2024

Module Title Introduction to Classical Arabic
Module Code TP537 (ITS) / RET1069 (Banner)
Faculty Humanities & Social Sciences School Theology, Philosophy & Music
Module Co-ordinator-
Module Teachers-
NFQ level 9 Credit Rating 10
Pre-requisite Not Available
Co-requisite Not Available
Compatibles Not Available
Incompatibles Not Available
None
Description

This module introduces participants to a form of Arabic known as al-'Arabiyya al-Fuṣḥā (literally: ‘the most eloquent / pure Arabic’). This language – in its different historical phases – is described in English by a variety of terms: Classical Arabic, Literary Arabic, Modern Standard Arabic, Formal Arabic and so on. To those who use the language, both forms are Fuṣḥā, and if a distinction is made, the terms Fuṣḥā al-Turāth (‘heritage’) and Fuṣḥā al-Ar (‘contemporary’) are used. This formal and standardised form of the language is the only form of Arabic that enjoys official status in the Arabic-speaking world and in international organisations. Fuṣḥā is not to be confused with the numerous local spoken forms of Arabic (spoken as the first language of more than 250 million people – and sometimes referred to as ‘dialects’). Fuṣḥā also plays a central role in the lives of the world’s approximately 1.8 billion Muslims as it is the language of the Islamic revelation (the Qur’ān) and the corpus of Islamic tradition (the Ḥadīth). Fuṣḥā is also the language of canonical prayer and the numerous Islamic religious discourses (scriptural exegesis, jurisprudence and theology, for instance.) In this module students develop knowledge and skills in the morphology, syntax and vocabulary of Classical Arabic, and will begin to read and translate basic texts in Classical Arabic.

Learning Outcomes

1. Describe the sociolinguist contexts of the Arabic language
2. Read and write using the Arabic writing system
3. Understand some basic Arabic morphology and syntax
4. Manipulate a core vocabulary of the most frequently encountered Arabic words
5. Read, and translate elementary texts in Arabic
6. Use some of the standard reference tools necessary for further engagement with Classical Arabic texts



Workload Full-time hours per semester
Type Hours Description
Lecture24No Description
Independent Study126No Description
Total Workload: 150

All module information is indicative and subject to change. For further information,students are advised to refer to the University's Marks and Standards and Programme Specific Regulations at: http://www.dcu.ie/registry/examinations/index.shtml

Indicative Content and Learning Activities

Syllabus
1. The history and sociolinguistics of Classical Arabic 2. The Arabic writing system and transliteration / romanization systems 3. Arabic morphology 4. Arabic syntax 5. Arabic lexis 6. Classical Arabic literary genres 7. Using standard reference works 8. Working with Arabic manuscripts

Assessment Breakdown
Continuous Assessment100% Examination Weight0%
Course Work Breakdown
TypeDescription% of totalAssessment Date
Assignmentn/a30%n/a
In Class Testn/a30%n/a
Participationn/a20%n/a
Loop Quizn/a20%n/a
Reassessment Requirement Type
Resit arrangements are explained by the following categories:
Resit category 1: A resit is available for both* components of the module.
Resit category 2: No resit is available for a 100% continuous assessment module.
Resit category 3: No resit is available for the continuous assessment component where there is a continuous assessment and examination element.
* ‘Both’ is used in the context of the module having a Continuous Assessment/Examination split; where the module is 100% continuous assessment, there will also be a resit of the assessment
This module is category 1
Indicative Reading List

  • Karin C. Ryding: 2014, Arabic: A Linguistic Introduction, Cambridge University Press, 9781107023314
  • Alan Jones: 2005, Arabic Through the Qur'an, Islamic Texts Society, Cambridge, 0946621683
  • Wolfdietrich Fischer,Jonathan Henry Rodgers: 2002, A Grammar of Classical Arabic, 3rd, Yale University Press, New Haven, 9780300084375
  • J. A. Haywood and H. M. Nahmad: 1990, A New Arabic Grammar of the Written Language, 2nd, Lund Humphries, London, 978-085331585
  • David Cowan: 1958, An Introduction to Modern Literary Arabic, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 978-052109240
Other Resources

None

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