1st Edition

Wolfhart Heinrichs´ Essays and Articles on Arabic Literature General Issues, Terms

Edited By Hinrich Biesterfeldt, Alma Giese Copyright 2024
410 Pages 1 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

410 Pages 1 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

410 Pages 1 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

Wolfhart Heinrichs’ Essays and Articles on Arabic Literature: General Issues, Terms is the first of two volumes that showcase a great number of Heinrichsʼ writings on his central field of research: Arabic literature. This volume specifically looks at poetry and rhetoric, and their indigenous theories and terminologies. Wolfhart Heinrichs (1941-2014) was James Richard Jewett Professor of... Read more

Frontispiece (A Portrait of the Scholar as a Young Man)

Foreword by Michael Cooperson

Introductory Editorial Remarks

 

General issues

Literaturtheorie

Einführung

Philology

The Classification of the Sciences and the Consolidation of Philology in Classical Islam

Literary Theory: The Problem of its Efficacy

Poetik, Rhetorik, Literaturkritik, Metrik und Reimlehre

Rhetorical Figures

Klassisch-arabische Theorien dichterischer Rede

Prosimetrical Genres in Classical Arabic Literature

Die altarabische Qaṣīde als Dichtkunst

Authority in Arabic Poetry

“Manierismus” in der Arabischen Literatur

Obscurity in Classical Arabic Poetry

Modes of Existence of the Poetry in the Arabian Nights

Early Ornate Prose and the Rhetorization of Poetry in Arabic Literature

Naḳd

 

Terms

Istiʿārah and Badīʿ and their Terminological Relationship in Early Arabic Literary Criticism

Paired Metaphors in Muḥdath Poetry

On the Genesis of the Haqîqa-Majâz Dichotomy

“Takhyīl” and its Traditions

Rose Versus Narcissus. Observations on an Arabic Literary Debate   

 

Notes on the Index

Index of Classical Authors, Selected Book Titles, and Key Terms

Biography

Hinrich Biesterfeldt is a retired Professor of Arabic and Islamic Studies at Ruhr University Bochum, Germany. He received his PhD in 1970 in Göttingen. He is the author of books and articles on Arabic literature and the history of the sciences in Islam. Together with Sebastian Günther, he is the editor of the series Islamic History and Civilization.

Alma Giese is an Arabist who received her PhD in 1980 in Giessen, Germany; a translator of numerous works from classical Arabic literature into German; and the widow of Wolfhart Heinrichs.

"Like dear members of a dispersed tribe gathered again; like precious stray camels rounded up; like scattered lustrous pearls strung at last: here, in this treasure trove, are brought together many matchless studies, the opera minora of a major scholar, Wolfhart Heinrichs, whose learning is as deep as it is wide, ranging from Arabic poetics, poetry, and poets to Muslim jurisprudence and Semitic linguistics."

Geert Jan, retired Laudian Professor of Arabic, Oxford University.

"With these seminal and incisive articles, Wolfhart Heinrichs played a major role in the late twentieth century renaissance in the study of classical Arabic poetry and poetics. They showcase his mastery of the Arabic literary critical tradition, his command of the rhetoric and architectonics of the qasida, and his keen sense of aesthetics. Heinrichs reminds us that Arabic poetry and poetics did not exist in an intellectual vacuum but were coterminous and contiguous with trends and development in disciplines such as law and theology."

James E. Montgomery, Sir Thomas Adams´s Professor of Arabic, Cambridge University.