The Politics of Writing in Iran: A History of Modern Persian Literature

The Politics of Writing in Iran: A History of Modern Persian Literature

by Kamran Talattof
The Politics of Writing in Iran: A History of Modern Persian Literature

The Politics of Writing in Iran: A History of Modern Persian Literature

by Kamran Talattof

Hardcover(1 ED)

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Overview

Emerging in the late nineteenth and twentieth centuries as a secular activity, Persian literature acquired its own modernity by redefining past aesthetic practices of identity and history. By analyzing selected work of major pre- and post-revolutionary literary figures, Talattof shows how Persian literary history has not been an integrated continuum but a series of distinct episodic movements shaped by shifting ideologies. Drawing on western concepts, modern Persian literature has responded to changing social and political conditions through complex strategies of metaphorical and allegorical representations that both construct and denounce cultural continuities. The book provides a unique contribution in that it draws on texts that demonstrate close affinity to such diverse ideologies as modernism, Marxism, feminism, and Islam. Each ideological standard has influenced the form, characterization, and figurative language of literary texts as well as setting the criteria for literary criticism and determining which issues are to be the focus of literary journals.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780815628187
Publisher: Syracuse University Press
Publication date: 05/01/2000
Edition description: 1 ED
Pages: 254
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x 0.73(d)

About the Author

Kamran Talattof teaches Persian language and literature and Iranian culture at the University of Arizona. He is coeditor of Contemporary Debates in Islam: An Anthology of Modernist and Fundamentalist Thought, and The Poetry of Nizami Ganjavi: Knowledge, Love, and Rhetoric, and cotranslator of Women Without Men by Shahrnush Parsipur, the latter also published by Syracuse University Press.

Table of Contents

Prefaceix
A Note on Translation and Transliterationxi
1.Introduction: Episodic Literary Movement--A Model for Understanding Literary History1
2.Persianism: The Ideology of Literary Revolution in the Early Twentieth Century19
3.Revolutionary Literature: The Committed Literary Movement in the Decades Before the 1979 Revolution66
4.Revolution and Literature: The Rise of the Islamic Literary Movement after the 1979 Revolution108
5.Feminist Discourse in Postrevolutionary Women's Literature135
6.Conclusion: Applicability of Episodic Literary Movement in Arabic and Turkish Literature173
Notes185
Bibliography219
Index235
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