Arabic, Persian, and Turkic Poetics: Towards a Post-Eurocentric Literary Theory: Proceedings of the British Academy, cartea 266
Editat de Hany Rashwan, Rebecca Ruth Gould, Nasrin Askarien Limba Engleză Hardback – 19 dec 2024
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780197267790
ISBN-10: 0197267793
Pagini: 376
Ilustrații: 1 b/w
Dimensiuni: 163 x 242 x 24 mm
Greutate: 0.68 kg
Editura: OUP/British Academy
Colecția OUP/British Academy
Seria Proceedings of the British Academy
Locul publicării:Oxford, United Kingdom
ISBN-10: 0197267793
Pagini: 376
Ilustrații: 1 b/w
Dimensiuni: 163 x 242 x 24 mm
Greutate: 0.68 kg
Editura: OUP/British Academy
Colecția OUP/British Academy
Seria Proceedings of the British Academy
Locul publicării:Oxford, United Kingdom
Recenzii
Arabic, Persian, and Turkish poetics are too often studied in isolation from one another, or in the stifling shadow of European poetics and European literary theory. This volume does the very opposite. It brings a series of important studies-by a wide-ranging, international cadre of scholars-of distinct and distinctive works from the Arabic, Persian, and Turkish traditions into conversation with each other. And, by excavating and foregrounding literary theoretical terms native and inherent to Arabic, Persian, and Turkish, it posits a literary theory that is both post-Eurocentric and non-Eurocentric. This will be required reading for anyone wishing to work within any of or across Arabic, Persian, and Turkish literature and poetic.
If one thinks that Aristotle's Poetics and the traditional western trinity of drama, lyric, and epic must apply universally, one does not do justice to the Middle Eastern tradition. For Arabic, Persian, and Ottoman Turkish literature a different set of standards is valid and those literatures must be studied on their own terms. This volume is the first of its kind: an excellent and coherent collection of studies of literary theory and poetics in the premodern Islamic world, where each language has a literary tradition with its own character, but where central critical concepts are held in common.
With unparalleled depth and unyielding commitment to the rich terminologies and concepts inherent to Arabic, Persian, and Turkic literary traditions, it heralds a new dawn for post-Eurocentric literary theory. A clarion call to scholars, it invites them to venture beyond familiar horizons and immerse themselves in the multifaceted realm of Islamicate literary cultures. By placing indigenous poetics and theoretical frameworks at the forefront, it paves the way for scholarship that honors the cultural distinctions of these traditions while boldly engaging with the wider world of literary discourse. This is indispensable for those aspiring to truly comprehend Islamic poetics and champion a more inclusive and representative global literary theory.
This volume highlights rich traditions of pre-modern comparative practices which challenge the modernist, Eurocentric biases of the field. It transcends, through expert engagement with literature and theory in Arabic, Persian, and Turkish, the chronic inferiority complex towards Euro-American literary theory, which has kept these literary traditions captive, framed by imposed Western theoretical frameworks. The groundbreaking work in this volume resets the entire field of comparative literature, recognising the urgency of studying the literature of the Islamicate world on their own terms, not merely as passive subjects of study but as active and significant participants in the so-called field of World Literature and the study of the Humanities at large.
A superb collection that details the distinctive characters of the Arabic, Persian, and Turkish literary traditions as well as the numerous and subtle ways in which they have interacted. With depth and nuance, this volume conveys the integrity and logic of a range of literary expression, with examples from the 10th to 20th centuries, in the three languages. In elucidating the conceptual and aesthetic underpinnings of these varied modes of expression in their own terms, this book represents a pioneering and much needed post-Eurocentric exploration of central literary categories of the Arabic, Persian, and Turkish traditions and elucidates what might be termed an Islamicate comparative poetics, enriching the repertoire available for developing a transnational and global literary theory.
If one thinks that Aristotle's Poetics and the traditional western trinity of drama, lyric, and epic must apply universally, one does not do justice to the Middle Eastern tradition. For Arabic, Persian, and Ottoman Turkish literature a different set of standards is valid and those literatures must be studied on their own terms. This volume is the first of its kind: an excellent and coherent collection of studies of literary theory and poetics in the premodern Islamic world, where each language has a literary tradition with its own character, but where central critical concepts are held in common.
With unparalleled depth and unyielding commitment to the rich terminologies and concepts inherent to Arabic, Persian, and Turkic literary traditions, it heralds a new dawn for post-Eurocentric literary theory. A clarion call to scholars, it invites them to venture beyond familiar horizons and immerse themselves in the multifaceted realm of Islamicate literary cultures. By placing indigenous poetics and theoretical frameworks at the forefront, it paves the way for scholarship that honors the cultural distinctions of these traditions while boldly engaging with the wider world of literary discourse. This is indispensable for those aspiring to truly comprehend Islamic poetics and champion a more inclusive and representative global literary theory.
This volume highlights rich traditions of pre-modern comparative practices which challenge the modernist, Eurocentric biases of the field. It transcends, through expert engagement with literature and theory in Arabic, Persian, and Turkish, the chronic inferiority complex towards Euro-American literary theory, which has kept these literary traditions captive, framed by imposed Western theoretical frameworks. The groundbreaking work in this volume resets the entire field of comparative literature, recognising the urgency of studying the literature of the Islamicate world on their own terms, not merely as passive subjects of study but as active and significant participants in the so-called field of World Literature and the study of the Humanities at large.
A superb collection that details the distinctive characters of the Arabic, Persian, and Turkish literary traditions as well as the numerous and subtle ways in which they have interacted. With depth and nuance, this volume conveys the integrity and logic of a range of literary expression, with examples from the 10th to 20th centuries, in the three languages. In elucidating the conceptual and aesthetic underpinnings of these varied modes of expression in their own terms, this book represents a pioneering and much needed post-Eurocentric exploration of central literary categories of the Arabic, Persian, and Turkish traditions and elucidates what might be termed an Islamicate comparative poetics, enriching the repertoire available for developing a transnational and global literary theory.
Notă biografică
Dr Hany Rashwan is a scholar of Arabic and Comparative Poetics. He is an Assistant Professor of Arabic Language and Literature at UAE University as well as an Honorary Research Fellow at The University of Birmingham.Professor Rebecca Ruth Gould is a Distinguished Professor of Comparative Poetics and Global Politics, School of Oriental and African Studies (SOAS), University of London.Dr Nasrin Askari is a Research Fellow and Translator on the Persian segment of the European Research Council-funded project Global Literary Theory (GlobalLIT).