The eloquence of the Holy Qur'an: An analytical study of the levels of rhetorical inimitability and its impact on Islamic thought
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.66026/hfxnh342Keywords:
Quranic Inimitability, Eloquence, Composition (Nazm), Artistic Imagery, Arabic Rhetoric.Abstract
Abstract
This study examines the concept of Quranic eloquence as a foundational pillar of Arabic rhetorical theory and Islamic intellectual heritage. It adopts an analytical approach that integrates classical Balaghah methodologies with modern linguistic perspectives to explore the multiple levels of stylistic inimitability (I‘jaz) within the Quranic text. The central premise posits that the Quran represents an unparalleled linguistic achievement that transcends human rhetorical capacity, challenging native Arab eloquence at its historical peak. The research is structured around several core themes: the historical emergence of Arabic rhetoric as a discipline driven by Quranic inimitability, the three primary domains of rhetorical expression—simile (tashbih), metaphor (isti‘arah), and metonymy (kinayah)—Abdul Qahir al-Jurjani’s theory of nazm (compositional structure), the strategic use of conciseness (ijaz) and amplification (itnab), and the artistic imagery that characterizes Quranic discourse. The study concludes that Quranic eloquence operates as an integrated system resistant to human replication, establishing the text’s enduring miraculous nature. Furthermore, the findings demonstrate that each rhetorical level contributes uniquely to the Quran’s persuasive power and its transformative impact on Islamic thought, language theory, and hermeneutics across fourteen centuries.
References
Downloads
Published
Issue
Section
License
Copyright (c) 2026 Journal Of Babylon Center for Humanities Studies

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.


