Results 251 to 260 of about 150,416 (301)
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Persian Literature

Journal of the American Oriental Society, 1989
Julie Scott Meisami, Ehsan Yarshater
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Modern Persian Prose Literature

Journal of the American Oriental Society, 1970
The"classical" period of Persian literature, whose product was almost exclusively poetry, is generally considered to have ended in 1492, with the death of the poet JamI. A "literary revival" began in the nineteenth century, in the wake of renewed cultural contacts between Iran and the Western world, and gained momentum in the twentieth century.
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Iranica Heirloom: Persian Literature

Iranian Studies, 1998
As We Enter a New Century and Millennium, We Tend to View More entities as forged, made up, invented—constructed is the more professional term in scholarship—than we did at any time in the past. Not only poems, paintings and other artifacts, but a whole range of phenomena, from an individual's sense of identity, to categories of knowledge or scientific
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Persian Literature in India

1968
Up to the present histories of Iranian literature have not as a rule included a comprehensive study of Indo-Persian literature, although many of the works produced by Persian authors in India are of considerable artistic importance.
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Persian Literature

Die Welt des Islams, 1990
Michael Glunz, Ehsan Yarshater
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Classical Persian Literature

Journal of the American Oriental Society, 1958
M. J. Dresden, A. J. Arberry
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Classical Persian Literature

Die Welt des Islams, 1959
Fr. Taeschner, A. J. Arberry
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General Introduction to Persian Literature

2009
Persian literature is the jewel in the crown of Persian culture. It has profoundly influenced the literatures of Ottoman Turkey, Muslim India and Turkic Central Asia and been a source of inspiration for Goethe, Emerson, Matthew Arnold and Jorge Luis Borges among others.
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The Beginnings of Persian Literature

1968
The origin of Persian literature is shrouded in a dense mist that for a long time appeared to be impenetrable. That a remarkable insight into the subject has been obtained in recent years is the result of research, based on more or less fortuitous fragments or incidental references in ancient Arabic writers; further thanks to newly discovered records ...
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