Mehdi Azaiez was born in Paris in 1974.[2] He served as an assistant professor of Islamic theology at Katholieke Universiteit Leuven between 2014 and 2019. Before that, during 2012–2013, he taught Islamic studies and co-directed the international Qur’ân Seminar project at the University of Notre Dame in Indiana, United States. From 2013, he has been a member of the Publications and Research Committee for the International Quranic Studies Association. He also founded and edits the website Quran and Early Islam, which focuses on Quranic studies.[3]
Works
As author
Le contre-discours coranique (The Quranic Counter-discourse) (2015)[4]
As editor
Le Coran: nouvelles approches (The Quran: New Approaches) (2013)[5]
The Qur'an Seminar Commentary / Le Qur'an Seminar. A Collaborative Study of 50 Qur'anic Passages / Commentaire collaboratif de 50 passages coraniques (2017)
Le Coran : de la tribu à l’empire. Autour de l’œuvre de Jacqueline Chabbi (The Quran: from tribe to empire. Around the work of Jacqueline Chabbi) (2023)
Qurʾānic Studies: Between History, Theology and Exegesis (2023)[6]
Itinerant Prophets:Rewritings, Appropriations and Metamorphoses of Prophetic Figures in the Religious, Literary and Historiographical Texts of Pre-modern Islam (2025) with Rémy Gareil and Iyas Hassan
Terrier, Mathieu (2016-09-01). "Le Coran, nouvelles approches, sous la direction de Mehdi Azaiez, avec la collaboration de Sabrina Mervin: Paris, CNRS Éditions, 2013". Revue de l'histoire des religions (233): 431–434. doi:10.4000/rhr.8596. ISSN0035-1423.
Denkha, Ataa (2014-12-15). "Le Coran. Nouvelles approches: Sous la direction de Mehdi Azaiez, en collaboration avec Sabrina Mervin, Paris, CNRS Éditions, 2013, 350 p.". Revue des sciences religieuses (88/4): 557. doi:10.4000/rsr.9019. ISSN0035-2217.
^Reviews of Qurʾānic Studies: Between History, Theology and Exegesis:
Belhaj, Abdessamad (2024-03-20). "Qurʾānic Studies between History, Theology and Exegesis Qurʾānic Studies between History, Theology and Exegesis, edited by Mehdi Azaiez and Mokdad Arfa-Mensia". Islam and Christian–Muslim Relations: 1–3. doi:10.1080/09596410.2024.2330220. ISSN0959-6410.