The Arabian Nights Reader

Capa
Ulrich Marzolph
Wayne State University Press, 2006 - 373 páginas

An authoritative guide to research inspired by the Arabian Nights, containing sixteen influential essays.

The Arabian Nights commands a place in world literature unrivaled by any other fictional work of "Oriental" provenance. Bringing together Indian, Iranian, and Arabic tradition, this collection of tales became popular in the Western world during the eighteenth century and has since exerted a profound influence on theater, opera, music, painting, architecture, and literature. The Arabian Nights Reader offers an authoritative guide to the research inspired by this rich and intricate work. Through a selection of sixteen influential and currently relevant essays, culled from decades of scholarship, this volume encompasses the most salient research topics to date, from the Nights' early history to interpretations of such famous characters as Sheherazade.

While serious research on the Nights began early in the nineteenth century, some of the most puzzling aspects of the collection's complex history and character were solved only quite recently. This volume's topics reflect the makings of a transnational narrative: evidence of a ninth-century version of the Nights, the work's circulation among booksellers in twelfth-century Cairo, the establishment of a "canonical" text, the sources used by the French translator who introduced the Nights to the West and the dating of this French translation, the influence of Greek literature on the Nights, the genre of romance, the relationship between narration and survival within the plots, reception of the Nights from the nineteenth century onward, interpretations of single stories from the collection, the universal nature of the sexual politics surrounding Sheherazade, and the repercussion of the Nights in modern Arabic literature.

As this collection demonstrates, the Arabian Nights helped shape Western perceptions of the "Orient" as the quintessential "Other" while serving to inspire Western creativity. The research presented here not only deepens our insight into this great work but also heightens our awareness of the powerful communal forces of transnational narrative.

 

Conteúdo

The Growth of Scholarly Interest in the Arabian Nights
1
The Oldest Documentary Evidence for the Title Alf Laila
83
The Sources of Gallands Nuits
122
Greek Form Elements in the Arabian Nights
137
Romance as Genre in The Thousand and One Nights
170
NarrativeMen
226
An Analysis of the Tale of the Three Apples from
239
Historical and Mythical Baghdad in the Tale of Ali b Bakkār
249
The Monstrous Births of Aladdin
265
The City of Brass
283
The Tale Told by the Kings Steward
298
A Commentary on the Ethics of Violence
327
Shahrazad Feminist
347
Index
365
Direitos autorais

Termos e frases comuns

Sobre o autor (2006)

Ulrich Marzolph is professor of Islamic Studies at the Georg-August University, Göttingen, Germany, and a senior member of the editorial committee of the Enzyklopädie des Märchens, an international handbook of comparative folk narrative research. He is the editor of The Arabian Nights Reader (Wayne State University Press, 2006) and co-editor with Richard van Leeuwen of The Arabian Nights Encyclopedia (ABC-CLIO, 2006).

Informações bibliográficas