The
Study of Arabic in the West
9
There are a number of general introductions. Of the older ones, Chejne (1969)
and Bateson (1967) may be mentioned. More recent introductions include one in
English (Bakalla 1984), one in Romanian (Anghelescu 1984, 1986; in the meantime
an Italian and a French translation have appeared), one in Spanish (Abboud-
Haggar 2010), and one in Dutch (Schippers and Versteegh 1987). Holes (1995a) is
an extensive introduction to all aspects of Modern Standard Arabic,
both linguistic
and sociolinguistic; it includes a section on the history of the Arabic language.
For the study of the Arabic dialects, Fischer and Jastrow (1980) produced a
Handbuch der arabischen Dialekte
, with a short introduction about the history of
Arabic. There are two short introductions to
the Arabic dialects, one in Polish
(Danecki 1989) and one in Italian (Durand 1995). An important methodological
introduction to Arabic dialectology was published by Behnstedt and Woidich
(2005). The abovementioned
Encyclopedia of Arabic Language and Linguistics
contains
more than fifty sketches of dialects from all over the Arabic-speaking world, as
well as surveys of the language situation in all Arab countries.
The standard account of the history of Arabic studies in the West is still Fück
(1955); a more recent publication is Bobzin (1992); Hamilton (2006) has a short
survey. For the early comparative studies of Hebrew grammarians, see Téné (1980)
and van Bekkum (1983). The various shifts in attitude in Western Europe towards
the role of the Arabs in the transmission of Greek knowledge and the effect that
these shifts had on the study of Arabic are analysed by Klein-Franke (1980), from
which the quotations from Frisius and Clenardus were taken; the impact of trans
-
lations from Arabic in Western Europe is studied by Daniel (1979). For the first
Latin–Arabic glossaries, see van Koningsveld (1976).
On the Christian perception
of Islam and the Dominicans’ missionary strategy, see Nolan (2002: 233–55); on the
early missionary grammars of Arabic from the seventeenth century, see Zwartjes
and Woidich (2012).
Comrie (1991, 2008) underscores the importance of Arabic for general linguistic
studies, a highly relevant topic since Arabic is used relatively seldom in typological
or general linguistic studies. The growing cooperation between general linguists
and Arabic linguists has brought about an increased interest in those features of
the structure of Arabic that are relevant from a general
linguistic point of view
(see Chapter 6).