The Reader in al-Jahiz :The Epistolary Rhetoric of an Arabic Prose Master ( Edinburgh Studies in Classical Arabic Literature )

Publication subTitle :The Epistolary Rhetoric of an Arabic Prose Master

Publication series :Edinburgh Studies in Classical Arabic Literature

Author: Thomas Hefter  

Publisher: Edinburgh University Press‎

Publication year: 2014

E-ISBN: 9780748692750

P-ISBN(Paperback): 9780748692743

Subject: I06 Literature, Literature Appreciation;I1 World Literature

Keyword: 世界文学,文学

Language: ENG

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Description

The 9th-century essayist, theologian and encyclopaedist ‘Amr b. Baḥr al-JÄ?ḥiẓ has long been acknowledged as a master of early Arabic prose writing. Many of his most engaging writings were clearly intended for a broad readership but were presented as presented as letters to individuals. Despite the importance and quantity of these letters, surprisingly little academic notice has been paid to them. Now, Thomas Hefter takes a new approach in interpreting some of al-JÄ?ḥiẓ’s ‘epistolary monographs’. By focussing on the varying ways in which he wrote to the addressee, Hefter shows how al-JÄ?ḥiẓ shaped his conversations on the page in order to guide (or manipulate) his actual readers and encourage them to engage with his complex materials.

Thomas Hefter takes a new approach in interpreting some of al-JÄ?ḥiẓ’s ‘epistolary monographs’. By focussing on the varying ways in which he wrote to the addressee, Hefter shows how al-JÄ?ḥiẓ shaped his conversations on the page in order to guide (or manipulate) his actual readers and encourage them to engage with his complex materials.

Acknowledgments; Introduction; 1. The Addressee and the Occasion of Writing; 2. Epistolary Confrontations and Dialectics of Parody; 3. Undisclosed Origins and Homelands; 4. Faulting Misers in the Introduction of KitÄ?b al-BukhalÄ?ʾ; 5. Passive Addressee and Critical Reader in the AbŠÂ« al-ʿĀá¹£/Ibn al-Tawʾam Debate; Conclusion; Bibliography; Index.

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