Persian Literature as World Literature
Confronting nationalistic and nativist interpreting practices in Persianate literary scholarship, Persian Literature as World Literature makes a case for reading these literatures as world literature-as transnational, worldly texts that expand beyond local and national penchants. Working through an idea of world literature that is both cosmopolitan and critical of any monologic view on globalization, the contributors to this volume revisit the early and contemporary circulation of Persianate literatures across neighboring and distant cultures, and seek innovative ways of developing a transnational Persian literary studies, engaging in constructive dialogues with the global forces surrounding, and shaping, Persianate societies and cultures.
1138355818
Persian Literature as World Literature
Confronting nationalistic and nativist interpreting practices in Persianate literary scholarship, Persian Literature as World Literature makes a case for reading these literatures as world literature-as transnational, worldly texts that expand beyond local and national penchants. Working through an idea of world literature that is both cosmopolitan and critical of any monologic view on globalization, the contributors to this volume revisit the early and contemporary circulation of Persianate literatures across neighboring and distant cultures, and seek innovative ways of developing a transnational Persian literary studies, engaging in constructive dialogues with the global forces surrounding, and shaping, Persianate societies and cultures.
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Persian Literature as World Literature

Persian Literature as World Literature

Persian Literature as World Literature

Persian Literature as World Literature

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Overview

Confronting nationalistic and nativist interpreting practices in Persianate literary scholarship, Persian Literature as World Literature makes a case for reading these literatures as world literature-as transnational, worldly texts that expand beyond local and national penchants. Working through an idea of world literature that is both cosmopolitan and critical of any monologic view on globalization, the contributors to this volume revisit the early and contemporary circulation of Persianate literatures across neighboring and distant cultures, and seek innovative ways of developing a transnational Persian literary studies, engaging in constructive dialogues with the global forces surrounding, and shaping, Persianate societies and cultures.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781501354212
Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing
Publication date: 07/15/2021
Series: Literatures as World Literature
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 272
File size: 3 MB

About the Author

Mostafa Abedinifard is Assistant Professor without Review of Persian Literary Culture and Civilization at the University of British Columbia, Canada.

Omid Azadibougar is Professor of Comparative Literature and Translation at Hunan Normal University, China. He is the author of World Literature and Hedayat's Poetics of Modernity (2020) and The Persian Novel: Ideology, Fiction and Form in the Periphery (2014).

Amirhossein Vafa is Assistant Professor of English and Comparative Literature at Shiraz University, Iran. He is the author of Recasting American and Persian Literatures (2016).
Mostafa Abedinifard is Assistant Professor of Modern Persian Literature and Culture at the University of British Columbia, Canada. He is currently working on two monographs, titled Satiric Modernity: Humor, Affect, and Nationalism in Iran and Men, Boys, and Manhood in Modern Iranian Literature, Culture, and Film. He has published articles in Asian Cinema, The British Journal of Middle Eastern Studies, HUMOR: International Journal of Humor Research, Social Semiotics, de genere: Journal of Literary, Postcolonial and Gender Studies, Iran Nameh: A Quarterly of Iranian Studies, Literary Criticism (Tehran), Mahoor Music Quarterly (Tehran), and elsewhere.
Omid Azadibougar is Professor of Comparative Literature and Translation at Hunan Normal University, China. He is the author of The Persian Novel: Ideology, Fiction and Form in the Periphery (2014) and World Literature and Hedayat's Poetics of Modernity (2020).
Amirhossein Vafa is Assistant Professor of English and Comparative Literature at Shiraz University, Iran. He is the author of Recasting American and Persian Literatures (2016).

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments
Notes on Transliteration, Translation, and Dates
Introduction: Decolonizing a Peripheral Literature
Amirhossein Vafa (Shiraz University, Iran), Omid Azadibougar (Hunan Normal University, China), and Mostafa Abedinifard (University of British Columbia, Canada)
Part One. Literary Worldliness
1. The Birth of the German Ghazal out of the Spirit of World Literature
Amir Irani-Tehrani (West Point Military Academy, USA)
2. Otherworld Literature: Parahuman Pasts in Classical Persian Historiography and Epic
Sam Lasman (University of Chicago, USA)
3. Globalization in Pre- and Postrevolutionary Iranian Literature: A Comparative Study of Authors inside and outside Iran
Naghmeh Esmaeilpour (Humboldt University, Germany)
4. Contemporary Persian Literature and Digital Humanities
Laetitia Nanquette (University of New South Wales, Australia)
Part Two. Traveling Texts
5. Genres without Borders: Reading Modern Iranian Literature beyond "Center" and "Periphery"
Marie Ostby (Connecticut College, USA)
6. Persian Epistemes in Naim Frashëri's Albanian Poetry
Abdulla Rexhepi (University of Prishtina, Kosovo)
7. Ecumenism and Globalism in the Reception of Ferdowsi and His Shahnameh: Evidence from the "Baysonqori Preface"
Olga M. Davidson (Boston University, USA)
8. Cats and Dogs, Manliness, and Misogyny: On the Sindbad-nameh as World Literature
Alexandra Hoffmann (University of Chicago, USA)
9. Cinema Joins Forces with Literature to Form Canon: The Cinematic Afterlife of Sa'edi's "The Cow" as World Literature
Adineh Khojastehpour (University of New South Wales, Australia)
Part Three. The Transnational Turn
10. Until a Shirt Blossoms Red: Proto-Third Worldism in Ahmad Shamlou's Manifesto
Levi Thompson (University of Colorado Boulder, USA)
11. Translocal Dreams of Justice and Mobility: Fariba Vafi's Tarlan and Ali Mirdrekvandi's No Heaven for Gunga Din
Gay Jennifer Breyley (Monash University, Australia)
12. The Purloined Letter: Reconsidering Simin Daneshvar's Dagh-e Nang and the Politics of Translation in the Landscape of World Literature
Amy Motlagh (University of California Davis, USA)
13. World Literature as Persian Literature
Navid Naderi (Independent Scholar, Iran)
Notes on Contributors
Index
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