The author
David Stephen Powers is Professor of Near Eastern Studies at Cornell University and author of Muḥammad Is Not the Father of Any of Your Men: The Making of the Last Prophet, also available from the University of Pennsylvania Press.
(Source : www.arts.cornell.edu)
His CV.
Presentation
In Zayd, David S. Powers restores Muhammad’s adopted son to his place at the center of the Islamic foundation narrative, arguing that Zayd is modeled on earlier biblical figures to address ideas about legitimate succession and the theological doctrine of the finality of prophecy.
Although Muḥammad had no natural sons who reached the age of maturity, Islamic sources report that he adopted a man named Zayd shortly before receiving his first revelation. This "son of Muḥammad" was the Prophet’s heir for the next fifteen or twenty years. He was the first adult male to become a Muslim and the only Muslim apart from Muḥammad whose name is mentioned in the Qur’an. Eventually, Muḥammad would repudiate Zayd as his son, abolish the institution of adoption, and send Zayd to certain death on a battlefield in southern Jordan.
Curiously, Zayd has remained a marginal figure in both Islamic and Western scholarship. David S. Powers now attempts to restore Zayd to his rightful position at the center of the narrative of the Prophet Muḥammad and the beginnings of Islam. To do so, he mines traces left behind in commentaries on the Qur’an, in biographical dictionaries, and in historical chronicles, reading these sources against analogues in the Hebrew Bible. Powers demonstrates that in the accounts preserved in these sources, Zayd’s character is modeled on those of biblical figures such as Isaac, Ishmael, Joseph, and Uriah the Hittite. This modeling process was deployed by early Muslim storytellers to address two key issues, Powers contends: the bitter conflict over succession to Muḥammad and the key theological doctrine of the finality of prophecy. Both Zayd’s death on a battlefield and Muḥammad’s repudiation of his adopted son and heir were after-the-fact constructions driven by political and theological imperatives. (Source: http://www.upenn.edu/pennpress/book/15246.html)
Contents
Preface
Introduction
Chapter 1. Zayd
Chapter 2. Zaynab
Chapter 3. Mu’tah
Chapter 4. Usama
Conclusion
Notes
Bibliography
Index
Acknowledgments
Critics
"Zayd is philologically rigorous and exhibits a sophisticated understanding of the complicated intertwinings of Jewish, Christian, and Muslim literary works."—John C. Reeves, University of North Carolina, Charlotte
"The discovery of linkages between biblical texts and Islamic sources stands at the frontier of the study of early Islam today, and Powers contributes a remarkably interesting biography of Zayd in this direction."—Tayeb El-Hibri, University of Massachusetts, Amherst