Oral Literature of Iranian Languages Kurdish, Pashto, Balochi, Ossetic, Persian and Tajik
In the 1990s I gradually became convinced that the time had come for a new, comprehensive, and detailed history of Persian literature, given its stature and significance as the single most important accomplishment of the Iranian peoples. Hermann Ethé’s pioneering survey of the subject, “Neupersische Litteratur” in Grundriss der iranischen Philologie II, was published in 1904 and E.G. Browne’s far more extensive A Literary History of Persia, with ample discussion of the political and cultural background of each period, appeared in four successive volumes between 1902 and 1924. The English translation of Jan Rypka’s History of Iranian Literature, written in collaboration with a number of other scholars, came out in 1968 under his own supervision.
Iranian scholars have also made a number of significant contributions throughout the 20th century to different aspects of Persian literary history. These include B. Foruzânfar’s Sokhan va sokhanvarân (On poetry and poets, 1929–33), M.-T. Bahâr’s Sabk-Âshenâsi(Varieties of style in prose) in three volumes (1942) and a number of monographs on individual poets and writers. The truly monumental achievement of the century in this context was Dh. Safâ’s wide-ranging and meticulously researched Târikh-e adabiyyât dar Irân (History of Literature in Iran) in five volumes and eight parts (1953–79). It studies Persian poetry and prose in the context of their political, social, religious, and cultural background, from the rise of Islam to almost the middle of the 18th century... Contents
Contributors / xv
Foreword / xxi preface / xxvii
The Study of Popular Literature in the Persian Context / xxxv 1. Academic approaches to popular literature / xxxvi 2. Specifics of popular literature / xxxvii 3. Cultural components of Persian popular literature / xxxviii 4. The relation between popular and elite literature / xl 5. The relation between the individual and the collective / xlii 6. Persian popular literature as defined by content / xliii 7. The influence of printing on Persian popular literature / xliv 8. The study of Persian popular literature: present and future / xlvi
Chapter 1: Written Kurdish Literat ure (J. Blau) / 1 1. Introduction / 1 2. Early Kurdish literature / 4 Gurani literature / 7 The beginning of Sorani as a literary language / 9 The Kurdish press / 14 3. Kurdish literature after World War I / 15 In Armenia, 1921–89 / 15 In Turkey, 1923–57 / 18 In Iraq, 1919–57 / 19 Prose Literature / 21 In Iran, 1912–79 / 21 In Iraq and Turkey, 1958–90 / 22
In the Diaspora / 24 In Iran since 1979 / 26 In Turkey since 1991 / 27 In Iraq since 1991 / 28 In independent Armenia / 31 Chapter 2: Kurdish Oral Literat ure (Ch. Allison) / 33 1. Oral tradition in Kurdistan / 34 2. The upheavals of the late twentieth century / 37 3. Studies of Kurdish oral literature / 39 4. Genre / 41 5. Performers / 46 6. Shared traditions / 48 7. Kurdish traditions / 51 Mem and Zîn / 52 Dimdim / 56 8. Kurdish lyric / 62 Lyrical love songs / 64 Lamentation / 67 9. The future of Kurdish oral literature / 68 Chapter 3: Oralit y and Religion in Kurdistan : The Ye zidi and Ahlâ‚ e haqq Traditions (Ph.G. Kreyenbroek) / 70 1. The Yezidis and Ahlâ‚e Haqq / 72 Demography / 72 Religious affiliations / 73 History / 73 Some characteristic ideas and beliefs / 74 2. Textual traditions of the Yezidis and Ahlâ‚e Haqq / 75 The absorption of outside influences / 75 Storylines and sacred poems / 75 Polyvalence / 76 Characteristic topics / 76 Creation and the First Things / 76 Legends explaining the community’s origins and affiliations / 78 Saints and Holy Men / 78 Mystical themes / 79 Philosophical themes: the implications of death / 80 3. The sacred poems / 80 Formal characteristics / 80
Preface
Given the status and importance of Persian culture and literature, the need for a modern History of Persian Literature has long been felt by specialists and non-specialists alike. In the field of “elevated” Persian literature—undoubtedly one of the world’s great literary traditions—a detailed, modern History was urgently needed to introduce a modern Western readership to the literary masterpieces of the Islamic Iranian world.
Those whose views on literature are informed by traditional definitions of the concept, may regard this Companion Volume as less of a desideratum. The fact that two only partially related fields of study—on the one hand oral and popular literature in various forms of Persian, and on the other the whole range of literary traditions of the Kurds, Pashtuns, Baloch and Ossetes—are included in one volume, may at first glance seem to strengthen the impression that these subjects are of no more than marginal relevance to those interested in the literatures and civilizations of the Middle East and Central Asia.
A closer examination, however, shows both the criss-crossing web of interrelations between the “high” and “popular” literatures discussed in this volume, and their links with the classical Persian tradition, with which this History is chiefly concerned. Moreover, although the study of the subjects discussed here has long occupied a relatively marginal position within the wider field of Iranian Studies, in the context of a modern approach to Oriental Studies their relevance is now increasingly understood. Not only is the information these studies offer essential for a more realistic understanding of the countries and regions in question, but research in relatively unexplored fields of study has also had the advantage of forcing academics to explore new, modern methods of study.
Much of the information contained in the contributions to this volume is published here for the first time, and the work may confidently be expected to facilitate and stimulate future research. However, the task that faced the present contributors, viz. systematizing, describing, and contextualizing the bewildering mass of information that had so far been left unstudied, is only a first step. In order to realize the full potential of Oral and Popular Studies and the study of “minority” literatures generally, methods must be developed to enable us to interpret the material in ways that will truly further Western society’s understanding of the workings of another culture. The principal connection linking those working in fields on the margins of mainstream Persian literature is that both the nature of their material, and the insights of other disciplines touching on their field of study, force them to seek new definitions, novel methodological approaches, and above all a new understanding of what they are essentially looking for.
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Published in 2010 by I.â•›B.Tauris & Co Ltd 6 Salem Road, London W2 4BU 175 Fifth Avenue, New York NY 10010 www.ibtauris.com Distributed in the United States and Canada Exclusively by Palgrave Macmillan, 175 Fifth Avenue, New York NY 10010 Copyright © 2010 The Persian Heritage Foundation The right of The Persian Heritage Foundation to be identified as the originators of this work has been asserted by The Persian Heritage Foundation in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988. All rights reserved. Except for brief quotations in a review, this book, or any part thereof, may not be reproduced, stored in or introduced into a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise, without the prior written permission of the publisher. A History of Persian Literature: XVIII ISBN: 978 1 84511 918 8 A full CIP record for this book is available from the British Library A full CIP record is available from the Library of Congress Library of Congress Catalog Card Number: available Printed and bound in Great Britain by TJ International Ltd, Padstow, Cornwall from camera-ready copy edited and supplied by The Persian Heritage Foundation
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