This richly researched and theoretically robust work adds significantly to scholarly understandings of how Muhammad came to hold a diverse array of meanings for Muslims throughout the whole course of Islamic history."- Journal of Religious History Muhammad's Body: Baraka Networks and the Prophetic Assemblage give readers a deeper understanding of the complexity of Islam in particular, and religious belief in general.”. “ takes the reader on a well-researched and impeccably sourced journey.
This is an erudite, provocative tour de force."- Publishers Weekly offers fresh insights into Muslim masculinity, esotericism, and power. "A stimulating academic analysis of writings about the way Muhammad’s body supposedly blessed others during his lifetime and after his death. For some Sunni Muslims, Knight concludes, claims of religious authority today remain connected to ideas about Muhammad’s body. Drawing on insights from contemporary theory about the body, Knight shows how changing representations of the Prophet’s body helped to legitimatize certain types of people or individuals as religious authorities, while marginalizing or delegitimizing others.
In rich detail, he lays out the variety of ways that early believers imagined Muhammad’s relationship to beneficent energy-baraka-and to its boundaries, effects, and limits. Knight approaches hadith and sira as important religiocultural and literary phenomena in their own right. Analyzing classical Muslim literary representations of Muhammad’s body as they emerge in Sunni hadith and sira from the eighth through the eleventh centuries CE, Michael Muhammad Knight argues that early Muslims’ theories and imaginings about Muhammad’s body contributed in significant ways to the construction of prophetic masculinity and authority. Muhammad’s Body introduces questions of embodiment and materiality to the study of the Prophet Muhammad.