The issue also features the following articles by Gretchen Head, Aslıhan Gürbüzel, and our first Philological Conversation with Gauri Viswanathan and Michael Allan:
Print Culture and Sufi Modernity: Al-Tuhāmī al-Wazzānī’s Embodied Reading of Morocco’s Nahḍa, by Gretchen Head
Bilingual Heaven: Was There a Distinct Persianate Islam in the Early Modern Ottoman Empire?, by Aslıhan Gürbüzel
Philological Conversation
Heterodox Philology: A Conversation with Gauri Viswanathan, by Michael Allan
The journal Philological Encounters (PHEN) is dedicated to a historical and philosophical critique of philology and promotes critical and comparative perspectives with the aim of integrating textual scholarship and the study of language from across the world.
Contribute
Philological Encounters welcomes innovative and critical contributions in the form of articles as well as review articles of usually two to three related books, preferably from different disciplines. It is open to contributions from all disciplines studying the history of textual practices, hermeneutics, philology, philological controversies, or the global history of writing, archiving, tradition-making and publishing. An overview of previous issues and a more detailed overview of the submission process can be found on the journal's webpage.