
Classical Arabic Literature
Description
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With this anthology, distinguished Arabist Geert Jan van Gelder brings together well-known texts as well as less familiar pieces new even to scholars. Classical Arabic Literature reveals the rich variety of pre-modern Arabic social and cultural life, where secular texts flourished alongside religious ones. This masterful anthology introduces this vibrant literary heritage-including pieces translated into English for the first time-to a wide spectrum of new readers.
An English-only edition.
Reviews / Votes
Ranges over more than seven centuries, and flows with surprises and delights, aching love poems and weird, cruel fables, and Thomas Browneian reflections on the nature of Flies, or the relations between mystics and elephants, all beguilingly rendered and scrupulously commented. - Marina Warner (Times Literary Supplement) Van Gelder's translations are pleasant and clear, which is no small feat, especially with poetry... A work that will be enjoyed by many scholars and lay readers. - Letizia Osti (Middle East Literatures) The perfect collection to launch the Library of Arabic Literatureof interest to the scholar, the student, and the general reader. Its coverage is excellent, both in terms of historical sweep and generic variety. - Richard Sieburth, Professor of Comparative Literature, New York University The translations of this volume are a marvel, and often a tour de forceprecise, highly readable and evocative, with the benefit of well-honed use of iambic and other rhythmic devices. Though Van Gelder reminds us that he is not a native English speaker, his English strikes me as no less superlative than, say, Nabokovs mastery of the language (The National) Van Gelder succeeds in maintaining a high standard for literary translation This anthology is remarkable in its attention to the intricate patterns of meter and rhyme in Arabic poetry and in its combination of familiar and unfamiliar texts. Highly recommended. (Choice) Promises to be an invaluable mine of knowledge for scholars and general readers who need an introduction to the universal appeal and validity of the enlightening and enlightened literary heritage of the Arabic-Islamic intellectual tradition. (Journal of Islamic Studies) By and large, this volume, and indeed the entire series, promises to be an invaluable mine of knowledge for scholars and general readers who need an introduction to the universal appeal and validity of the enlightening and enlightened literary heritage of the Arabic-Islamic intellectual tradition. (Journal of Islamic Studies)More details
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Content
- Cover
- Table of Contents
- Letter from the General Editor
- Acknowledgements
- Abbreviations
- Introduction
- Notes to the Introduction
- Verse
- A Qasidah
- A Qasidah
- A Qasidah
- An Elegy (Marthiyah)
- Polemics in Verse: An Invective Qasidah
- Love in the Desert: A Qasidah
- An Umayyad Ghazal Poem, used as an Abbasid Song Text
- An 'Udhri Ghazal attributed to Majnun Layla
- An Umayyad Ghazal
- A Love Poem
- Anti-Arab, Pro-Iranian Lampoon (Hija')
- A Modern (Muhdath) Ghazal Epigram
- A Ghazal
- Two wine Poems
- A Lampooning Epigram (Hija')
- A Ghazal Poem
- Three Love Epigrams
- A Poem of Asceticism (Zuhdiyyah)
- Ibn al-Rumi: On His Poetry
- A Qasidah: A Party at 'Abd al-Malik ibn Salih al-Hashimi's
- A Panegyric Qasidah
- A Victory Ode: The Qasidah on Sayf al-Dawlah's Recapture of the Fortress of al-Hadath
- Nature Poetry: Two Epigrams
- Strophic Poem: A Muwashshahah
- An Anonymous Muwashshahah from Spain
- There Descended to You: A Philosophical Allegory
- Five Epigrams on Death and Belief
- Mystical Ghazal: A Poem
- A Mystical Zajal
- Two Elegies on the Death of his Concubine
- A Zajal: An Elegy on the Elephant Marzuq
- Rajaz
- Early Rajaz
- A Few Lines from the Poem of Proverbs
- A Few Lines from The Thousand-liner
- Light Verse: A Domestic Disaster
- "Didactic" Verse: From a Poem on How to Behave in Society
- Prose
- Examples of Early Rhymed Prose (Saj')
- A Pre-Islamic Tale: The Princess on the Myrtle Leaf (Three Versions)
- How the Queen of Sheba Became Queen
- Two Stories from Meadows of Gold
- Lives of The Poets: al-Farazdaq Tells the Story of Imru' al-Qays and the Girls at the Pond
- Bedouin Romance: The Unhappy Love Story of Qays and Lubna
- A Parable: The Human Condition, or The Man in the Pit
- Mirror for Princes (and Others): Passages from Right Conduct
- Al-Jahiz on Flies and Other Things
- Essayistic Prose: Al-Tawhidi on the Superiority of the Arabs
- History as Literature: Al-Amin and al-Ma'mun, the Sons of Harun al-Rashid
- Moral Tales and Parables: Passages from The Epistles of the Sincere Brethren
- Prose Narrative: Four Stories
- The Isfahan Maqamah
- The Debate of Pen and Sword
- A Visit to Heaven and Hell
- Poetics: Ibn Rashiq on the Definition and Structure of Poetry
- Literary Criticism: From The Secrets of Eloquence
- Popular Science: Two Chapters from the Encyclopedia of Animals
- A Section from an Adab Encyclopedia: The Chapter on Stinginess from The Precious and Refined in Every Genre and Kind
- A Fairytale: The Tale of the Forty Girls
- Erotica: The Young Girl and the Dough Kneader, from The Old Man's Rejuvenation
- Two Burlesque Stories from Brains Confounded
- Lyrical Prose: A Visit to the Bath
- Notes
- Chronology
- Glossary of Names and Terms
- A
- B
- D
- F
- G
- H
- I
- J
- K
- L
- M
- N
- Q
- R
- S
- T
- U
- W
- Z
- Bibliography
- Further Reading
- Index
- A
- B
- C
- D
- E
- F
- G
- H
- I
- J
- K
- L
- M
- N
- P
- Q
- R
- S
- T
- U
- W
- Y
- Z
- About the NYU Abu Dhabi Institute
- About the Typefaces
- About the Translator
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