The Arabic Literary Heritage: The Development of Its Genres and Criticism

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Cambridge University Press, 17.10.2005 - 437 Seiten
Roger Allen here offers an account of the cultural tradition of literary texts in Arabic, from their unknown beginnings in the fifth century AD to the present day. Allen's organising principle is not that of traditional literary histories, but is rather based on an account of the major genres of Arabic literature. After introductory chapters on principles and contexts, there are chapters devoted to the Qur'an as literature, poetry, belletristic prose, drama and criticism. Within each chapter the emphasis is on the texts themselves, and those who created and commented on them, but Allen also demonstrates his awareness of recent Western theoretical and critical approaches. The volume as a whole, which contains extensive quotations in English translation, a chronology and a guide to further reading, makes a major non-Western literary tradition newly accessible to students and scholars of the West.
 

Inhalt

An essay on precedents and principles
1
The contexts of the literary tradition II
11
sacred text and cultural yardstick
83
Poetry
103
Bellettristic prose and narrative
218
Drama
316
The critical tradition
361
Guide to further reading
407
Index
417
363
423
384
429
405
435
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