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Showing 10 results for Subject:
Ahmad Razi, Allahyar Afrakhte, Volume 18, Issue 69 (12-2010)
Abstract
Communication is one of the main functions of language. Linguistic communication usually combines with other modes of interaction such as nonverbal communication. People’s nonverbal behaviors display their styles and personality characteristics. Therefore, the fictionists and historians tend to reflect the quality and quantity of the character’s nonverbal relationship in their narration. The present study examines the adventure of Hanging of the Hasanak Minister in Tarikh-e Beyhaqi in order to show how Beyhaqi succeeds to imagine, objectify and portray the events of Qaznavi's periods and how it could improve the dramatic capacity of historical text with accuracy in nonverbal communication using a descriptive-analytical method and an interdisciplinary approach. This study displays that Beyhaqi often uses nonverbal communication in order to complete the verbal communication; but in many cases, they are replaced by verbal behavior or control the verbal behaviors.
, Volume 24, Issue 81 (Published issues 2017)
Abstract
Literary works are the carriers of many regulations, values, norms, beliefs, structures and existential, cultural, and social aspects of their time. Many of the social and cultural realities of past centuries embedded within the extant literary works of those centuries can be identified and followed through. The critical approach in discourse analysis of literary texts provides a more precise knowledge of different cultural and social manifestations, life aspects, and people’s intellectual systems of the society of the authors of these works. The issue of economy is among social and cultural structures that has been less attended to in literary researches. The study of economic discourse in literary texts can also reveal other social, cultural, and intellectual discourses governing the temporal context of creating these works. This article deals with the critical analysis of economic discourse of the poems of Khaqani Shirvani. The goal is that following this approach to study the influence of this type of economic thought and the resulting culture on the linguistic, aesthetic, and intellectual structure manifested in Khaqani’s poetry and also to find out the reason why such a specific economic culture was dominant at that time. The result of this study indicates that the discourse of social hierarchy and luxury was dominant then and along with the power discourse resulting from wealth it had been naturalized and institutionalized in the economic culture of the time.
Ali Safaei, Ali Alizadeh Joboni, Volume 25, Issue 83 (3-2018)
Abstract
One of the basic characteristics of satire is its humour. When dealing with supreme subjects like death, Satire sometimes movesaway from its basic characteristics such as comicality, candor and accessibility and becomes less relieving and more bitter and sad. When satire deals with death, which is always mysterious and tragic for humans, it fails to provide any absolute relief;instead it brings about short term forgetfulness in the audience through diverting their attention, and givesthem a temporary sense ofbliss. This article identifies satire of death as a complex genre and analyzes its different aspects in samplepoems by Shams Langaroudi. We will see that Shams uses different methods of satire of death to deal with this phenomenon and its related concepts such as thanatophobia. The article reveals that satire of death in poems of Shams reflects human's fear and apprehension about certainty of death and emphasizes the physical and bodily dimension of human being in the natural world.
Ali Taslimi, Behrouz Mahmoudi Bakhtiari, Mahmoud Ranjbar, Fakhry Rasouli Geravi, Volume 27, Issue 86 (7-2019)
Abstract
Implied author and implied reader are components of a narrative structure, playing a crucial role in illuminating hidden elements within a text. Therefore, studying these elements in literary works can expose the underlying layers of narration and open up new critical outlooks to the readers. Furthermore and in cases of cinematic adaptations, it explains whether this was the novel or the film that has managed to unravel narrative complexities of the other medium more successfully and better facilitate audience understanding. The novel GavKhuni and its film adaptation are among works in which the plot is not causal, but internal and fluid. Thus, the reader has to decode textual evidence in order to understand how conceptions and viewpoints are formed in characters. Afkhami’s adaptation of GavKhuni is totally loyal and all elements of the story are faithfully mirrored in the film. However, Afkhami has made use of these elements to present his own ideological concepts. Repetition is a method that both the author and the director have used to transfer their ideas to the audience. Using a descriptive-analytical methodology and a narratological and inter-disciplinary approach, the present research attempts to analyze the ways in which implied author and reader are represented in the novel and the film. Since the author and the reader of each era are thrown into their work and new meanings are discovered in fulfillment of their expectations, thus the audience of this novel and film would discover new meanings from out of the narrative text of GavKhuni as well as its adaptation.
, , , Volume 31, Issue 94 (6-2023)
Abstract
Summoning and recalling the past is the result of social and political crises of the present. In order to legitimize and confirm the rulers, Muslim writers tried to match the schemas of ancient times with their contemporary examples. In such adaptation, the existing king was compared to the ideal king and his performance was compared to that of the Golden Age of Iran. The centralized and organized historiography of the Sassanids narrated the story of Mazdak in order to legitimize the power and performance of the Sassanids and created an ideal image of the era of Anushirvān and his justice. Khājeh Nizām al-Mulk, who was in charge of the ministry in a turbulent era, was searching for an ideal government in the era of Anushirvān. To deal with the Ismaili movement, he resorted to the example of the killing of the Mazdakians by the Sassanid government in the final part of Siyāsatnāmeh, and by reconstructing the historical patterns, he not only confirmed the killing of the Mazdakians, but also legitimized the suppression of the Seljuk opponents.
Ali Taslimi, Farideh Faryād, Firouz Fāzeli, Volume 32, Issue 96 (4-2024)
Abstract
For Kristeva, each text is the result of its preceding textual network. Hence, to decode a text, one must consider this textual network. Authors and poets have always benefited from previous texts. This is sometimes done as legendism which is nothing but rewriting and recreating legends, and does not help literature much. However, “trans-legendism” has a different approach that can be a cause of literary transformation. Trans-legendism does not just refer to legends by way of allusion and referencing but transforms the past texts by employing intertextuality to the point that the reader cannot easily recognize what texts and legends have been used in the formation of the new text. In the novel Spells, we are faced with three methods: legend-telling, legendism, and trans-legendism. In The Blind Owl, too, the writer has transformed the text of the past through the use of multiple legends and myths. This article investigated the two novels based on trans-legendism or legendary intertextuality. This study concluded that both novels have benefitted from legends even in opposition to legends.
No Ebrāhim Hasanaklou, No Rezā Cherāghi, Volume 32, Issue 96 (4-2024)
Abstract
The debate over literary theory and Nima’s poetry has a long history. Literary critics have interpreted Nima from their own perspectives, offering various interpretations. The issue of this research is a critical re-reading of the views of Pournamdarian and Barahani in the 1990s as representatives of academic and non-academic criticism. This research showed that Pournamdarian and Barahani have occasionally been excessive in their understanding of Nima. As a result, despite Pournamdarian’s efforts to understand Nima’s poetry anew, he remains trapped in the stereotypical traditions of literary criticism, which leads him to define modern poetry under traditional poetry. On the other hand, Barahani has neglected the historical process of theorizing and Nima’s poetry, by going to extremes in some of his views and speaking of a crisis that we witness in the poetry from the 1990s onward. In other words, tradition and modernity are clearly at odds in the views of these two critics. Pournamdarian wants to blend modern poetry with traditional criticism, while Barahani becomes dogmatic in his criticism.
Dr Mostafâ Mirdâr Rezâyi, Volume 32, Issue 97 (1-2025)
Abstract
Nasir Khusraw’s poetry is full of intellectual arguments, religious topics, sermons, and wisdom, which has given his words a philosophical and somewhat complicated flavor. On the other hand, in his works, Attar of Nishapur has tried to present the heritage of Sufism of Khorasan and the poetry before him in a different style, through simple language, without glamor and impressive embellishments. The question of this research is whether the simplicity or complexity of language plays a role in the simplicity or complexity of the structure of poetic images. Adopting a quantitative and statistical method, the present research investigates the statistical and comparative analysis of the structure of the poetic images of Nasir Khusraw and Attar. The results of this study show that the simplicity or complexity of a poet’s language has little to do with the structure of his images. In other words, the geometry of the poet’s images cannot be considered simple or complex merely because of the simplicity or difficulty of his words. The language of Nasir Khusraw’s poetry is difficult and complex, but this feature has not had a significant effect on the geometry of his poem’s images, and most of his poetry’s images are simple and far from complex. On the other hand, the structure of Attar’s poetic images, despite the simplicity of the language and appearance, has a subtle and delicate complexity that cannot be understood except by analyzing the rhetorical materials used in the construction of the images. In other words, Attar’s language is simple but his images are complex.
Mehdi Nourian, Hadi Noori, Volume 32, Issue 97 (1-2025)
Abstract
This article seeks to critique the elitism in the thoughts of Iranian intellectuals of the 1950s and 1960s. To do so, it carries out a deconstructionist reading of Jalal Al-e-Ahmad’s story titled Farewell from the collection Sitar (literally: Three String Musical Instrument). The book contains 13 stories of Al-e-Ahmad published in 1948. The current study was conducted from the perspective of the French philosopher Jacques Derrida and employed the eight-step strategy of David Boje as a postmodern critical analysis in dealing with the narrative. Boje’s method includes searching for duality, reinterpreting hierarchies, discovering rebel voices, revealing the other side of the narrative, negating the plot, finding exceptions, tracing between the lines, and resituating. The article follows each of these steps to bring about the deconstructionist reading of the story. After using the 8-step strategy of Boje, eight dualities were found: beauty vs. ugliness, core vs. periphery, naked vs. clothed, enlightenment vs. gluttony, rational vs. superstitious, quiet vs. garrulous, boy vs. girl, and activity vs. passivity. Each of these dualities has a hierarchical dominant/subordinate structure, and the narrator narrates the story in a way he is in the dominant position. Then the hierarchy in each duality was reinterpreted so the rebels found their voice and the other side of the story appeared. The romantic plot of the story was replaced with a tragic one, exceptions were found, and between the lines were read. Based on Boje’s strategy and adopting Jacques Derrida’s deconstructionist approach to read Farewell, a new narrative emerged that made possible the critique of the elitist views of Iranian intellectuals during the 1950s and 1960s. It is necessary to go beyond the person of Al-e-Ahmad and get closer to the subject of Al-e-Ahmad as an Iranian intellectual; a subject that has been made possible in a particular context and has produced works. According to the narrative that emerged from the deconstructionist reading of the story, it is concluded that the intellectual subject reproduces the hierarchical relationships, puts himself in a superior position, relies on modern reason, and without considering and understanding the existential relations of the subaltern, seeks to represent them and aims to accomplish what he calls an intellectual mission.
Shakilâ Najjâri, Ali-Rezâ Nikouei, Masoumeh Qayouri, Volume 33, Issue 98 (5-2025)
Abstract
Gaston Bachelard (1884–1962), the renowned French theorist, explored imagination in literary texts through a psychological interpretation of archetypal elements—fire, water, air, and earth. In Bachelard’s view, the task of the power of thought is to produce concepts, and imagery is the product of the power of imagination. He argues that human beings imagine before they perceive or experience. From this perspective, literature and art originate from pure imagination. Bachelard maintains that conventional or rhetorical imagery has little significance; rather, what matters are those creative images that arise from the four primordial elements. In his view, imagination draws inspiration from the unconscious, determining which element predominates in a writer’s creative vision. Although an author may allude to all four elements within a single work, only one ultimately dominates the author’s imaginative field. The roots of these differences in poetry lie in the poet’s unconscious mind—encompassing inner desires, childhood memories, and the environment in which the poet’s reveries were formed. Hence, the fact that the material imagination of each writer is different from that of another is rooted in their biological, experiential, sensory, and intellectual differences. In this study, after examining Bachelard’s views on the imagination of fire—particularly as discussed in The Psychoanalysis of Fire and The Flame of a Candle—we analyze all of Forough Farrokhzad’s works that address these elements. The findings indicate that among the four elements, fire is the most dominant in Farrokhzad’s early poetry, symbolizing her passionate love, emotional intensity, and the sensual dimension of her amorous experience.
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