Arabic Poetry: Trajectories of Modernity and Tradition

(Grace) #1

CONTENTS



  • 1 Poetic trajectories: critical introduction A note on translation and transliteration xxi

    • Arabic poetry in context

    • Modernism and secular ideology

    • The modernist impulse and its aftermath

    • poetics 2 The tradition–modernity nexus in Arabic

    • A dynamic tradition

    • Masks

    • The surviving past

    • Recollections

    • Why precursors?

    • Translation as a modernist engagement

    • Configurational sites: classical and modern

    • Undermining poetics

    • Which tradition in the Rome conference (1961)?

    • The dialectics of tradition and modernity

    • Adnnls: the challenge of tradition

    • Modernity as a constant

    • Al-Baymtl’s tradition

    • Poetic career: Xalm.cAbd al-Xabnr



  • 3 Poetic strategies: thresholds for conformity and dissent

    • The neoclassical qaxldah:Al-Jawmhirl

    • Addressing the strong precursor

    • Approaching the glorious legacy: three directions

    • cAbd al-Xabnr and the emulation of independence

    • Al-Baymtl’s alien and rebellious precursors

    • Recreating the forebear

    • Adnnls’ objectifications of forebears

    • Trajectories of modernity and tradition

    • Conclusion

    • and figurations 4 Poetic dialogization: ancestors in the text—figures

    • Targeting the unitary discourse



  • 5 Dedications as poetic intersections

    • Arab gift compendiums

    • Poetic simulacrum of narrative

    • The prefatory and dedicatory in poetry

    • Al->aklm’s Bird of the East

    • Dedicatory matter: identity for acculturation

      • and the forlorn Al-Baymtland Khalll >mwl—the existentialist



    • Al-Sayymb’s lyrical–elegiac mood

    • Dedications as paratexts: al-Khml

    • Addressing Lorca

    • Elegy, dedication, and repression

    • Al-Mutanabbl: between al-Baymtland Adnnls

    • Appendix I

    • Appendix II

    • problematic encounters 6 Envisioning exile: past anchors and

    • Exilic evocations

    • Exilic trajectories

    • Textual homelands in context



  • 7 The edge of recognition and rejection: why T. S. Eliot?

    • Marxism Christianized

    • Deconstructing myth

    • Tradition and the polyphonic poem

    • The paradoxical appeal of The Waste Land

    • Disinheritance through excessive patching

    • Eliot appropriated in traditional satire

    • not allegiance 8 Conclusion: deviational and reversal poetics—dissent,

    • Poetics of legitimacy in context

    • The elegiac prelude

    • Classical transgressions

    • Engagements and invalidations

    • Iraqi pain recaptured

    • Sufism and transgression

    • Elegizing a present

    • Notes

    • Works cited

    • Index



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