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Between cosmopolitan and classical : Persian in early colonial India, c.1757-1857Shah, Zahra January 2017 (has links)
This thesis investigates the significance of Persian learning in Britain and India during the period of colonial expansion under the East India Company, from 1757 to 1857. It seeks to situate Persian in its wider social context in north India, and understand the significance and function of the language during a period which is typically described in terms of the decline of the Persianate world. It does so by studying Persian literary production and language-learning by a range of actors at different sites in north India. By examining the presence of Persianate texts and individuals in spaces and endeavours which are typically classified as modern (orientalist textual production in the colony, the rise of linguistic studies, colonial education and nineteenth-century Indian printing), this thesis emphasizes the ways in which Persianate relationships and sensibilities shaped these sites of Indian modernity, and were themselves altered in the process. This thesis shows that the reasons for the continued usage of Persian in late eighteenth and early nineteenth-century India went beyond its symbolic value as a marker of earlier Mughal power. Persian played an important role in shaping and constructing cosmopolitan literary and scholarly identities, as well as enabling spatial and social mobility. In so doing, this thesis hopes to contribute to the historiography of the Persianate world, as well as the histories of language, printing and education in colonial South Asia more broadly. In making these arguments, this thesis suggests a reappraisal of the ways in which the relationship between Indian modernity and cosmopolitan cultures now seen as 'classical' - such as that of Persian - is conceived. Rather than viewing Persian as a mere symbol of Mughal rule, a socially-grounded understanding of the Indian and colonial engagement with Persian is suggested. Understanding Persian in its social context in India, and recognizing the variety of spaces, languages and groups it interacted with challenges any neat categorization of the language as 'classical' or 'foreign' to India, or in opposition to vernacular or indigenous languages.
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Pavilion structure in Persianate gardens: reflections in the textual and visual mediaGharipour, Mohammad 14 January 2009 (has links)
The pavilion structure has been an integral part of Persianate gardens since its earliest appearance at the Achaemenid garden in Pasargadae (sixth century BC). Despite its significance, the scholarly focus on the study of gardens has somewhat sidelined the study of the pavilions and even neglected the cultural context of the development of the pavilions. The pavilion as a theme appears after the maturation of the concept of paradise as a garden in Near Eastern mythological and religious texts. The Quran is the first known text that integrated the two concepts of pavilion and garden in the imaginary paradise. Later, Persian poetry defines specific relationships between human beings, pavilions, and gardens while stressing the psychological and material values of pavilions and gardens.
Three types of resources were consulted to reconstruct the image of pavilion: literary documents (including mythology and poetry), different types of art (ranging from painting to carpets), and historical accounts. Referring to these allows us to explore the diversity of the pavilion's image in each medium and its degree of correspondence to reality. This dissertation explores the diversity of the pavilion (tent, kiosk, or building), its spatial, formal, and functional relationship with gardens as a flexible entity, and its cultural use. The historical accounts discussed in this dissertation prove the existence of buildings in gardens, the common use of tents as temporary residences, gender specificity of pavilions, and the multi-functionality of gardens for encampments, administrative affairs, and pilgrimages.
The pavilion as building is well documented in both visual and literary media. While poetry draws a clear boundary between the garden and building as separate entities, painting merges or separates the building and garden (as courtyard or planted area) physically, formally, and symbolically. The building in poetry is usually associated with the materialistic world, whereas the garden is often associated with the ideal world. This is, to some extent, visible in paintings in which the geometrical design of the building and the courtyard acts as a reference to the material world. The frequent reference to iwan as a consistent design element in painting and travelers' accounts proves its significance as an intermediate space between inside and outside the pavilion as a building.
Tents in gardens appear less frequently in poetry and painting than they do in textual sources. On the other hand, historical documents rarely point to kiosks or semi-open spaces in gardens, whereas kiosks are widely developed in paintings. The examination of paintings also reveals formal and functional similarities between the throne and kiosk. The kiosk appears in close physical and visual contact with natural components of gardens, and even serves as a connector between the garden and building. The pavilion as a kiosk is, however, to a large extent absent in poetry and historical documents probably due to the dominant interest in buildings. This research proves the dominant cultural view on the functional flexibility of Persianate gardens between the 14th and 18th centuries in using pavilion structures varying in form, function, and scale.
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Representational Realism in Cross-Cultural Perspective: Changing Visual Cultures in Mughal India and Safavid Iran, 1580-1750Botchkareva, Anastassiia Alexandra January 2014 (has links)
The concept of realism in visual representation has been defined and deployed largely within the domain of the Western artistic canon. In the field of art history, the term is often used in ways that depend on implicit, culturally coded assumptions about its connection with the formal markers of optical-naturalism. The Persianate tradition of pictorial representation by contrast, has been traditionally characterized in modern scholarship as stylized and decorative, with little acknowledgment of an interest in realism in its own visual language. Furthermore, normative Euro-centric attitudes have perpetuated the assumption that an engagement with realism entered Persianate artistic practices with the advent of Europeanizing modes of depiction in Safavid and Mughal spheres of production around the late sixteenth-century. This dissertation explores the topic of realism from the perspective of Persianate visual culture. In so doing, it proposes to refine our understanding of the concept in terms that accommodate the varied artistic production of cultures that laid claims to cultivating representational realism in their own primary sources.
The first chapter draws on multi-disciplinary discussions to challenge art historical treatments of pictorial realism as a style, in favor of a functional definition of the concept as an emergent quality rooted in formal strategies that activate particular patterns of mirror-response in their audiences.
The second and third chapters reject the principle of evaluating the realism of Persianate representations according to their degree of proximity to European models. The second chapter discusses the structural conditions of change in visual habitus in cases of inter-cultural encounter between foreign modes of representation and the resulting works of aesthetic hybridity. The third chapter presents material evidence of early modern Safavid and Mughal albums as discourses of aesthetic heterogeneity.
The fourth chapter explores the local Persianate roots of realism, including the changes these realism strategies underwent in the early modern period. The fifth and final chapter develops case studies of two seventeenth-century Mughal and Safavid drawings, which cultivate representational enlivenment in depicting harrowing moments of death. The discussion delves in greater detail into the particular patterns of realism developed in the seventeenth-century Persianate visual culture. / History of Art and Architecture
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The aesthetics of sppropriation : Ghalib's Persian Ghazal poetry and its criticsBruce, Gregory Maxwell 28 October 2010 (has links)
This thesis examines the Persian ghazal poetry of Mirza Ghalib. It does so in the light of the corpus of critical literature in Urdu, Persian, and English that concerns both the poetry of Ghalib as well as the poetry of the so-called “Indian Style” of Persian poetry. Poems by Ghalib and his literary forebears, including Fighani, Naziri, ‘Urfi, Zuhuri, Sa’ib, and Bedil are offered in translation; critical commentary follows each text. The thesis explicates the ways in which each of these authors engaged in an intertextual dialogue, here called javaab-go’ii, or appropriative response-writing, with his forebears, and argues that the dynamics of this intertextual dialogue contribute significantly to the poetry’s aesthetics. These “aesthetics of appropriation” are discussed, analyzed, and evaluated both in the light of Ghalib’s writings on literary influence and Persian poetics, as well as in the light of the aforementioned corpus of critical literature. / text
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The effects of social and political dislocation on Persianate children's literature : change and continuityAbdelsadek, Nafisa 02 1900 (has links)
This thesis seeks to investigate the various forces that have shaped modern
Persianate children‘s literature - history, revolution, political climate, government,
institutions, writers, education, and so on. The historical origins of tales popular in
modern times, and of themes recurrent in stories from past times to present are
analyzed, along with other factors which have shaped Persianate children‘s literature.
The thesis begins with a historical and theoretical overview relating to change
and continuity in Persianate children‘s literature. It examines the influence of ancient
texts on modern Persianate children‘s stories. The cultural development reflected in
the organizational infrastructure of institutions is also examined, as well as other
contemporary influences, both social and political, in order to assess how these have
affected modern Persianate children‘s literature. The contents of children‘s books are
analyzed from different aspects, including their representation of social values.
Concerns of children themselves are shown in examples of their own work; in
addition, works of illustrators of children‘s books, and examples from the extended
body of Persianate children‘s literature in Tajikistan are analyzed.
Modern children‘s literature is the product of a number of influences and
while differences can be perceived between historical periods, underlying similarities
can also be seen which show a continuity of socio-political purpose, either
supporting the status quo or challenging it. The thesis is concerned with this interplay
between the recurring uses of children‘s literature; moralistic, didactic, the political
agenda of its authors, criticism of the status quo, etc. and the surface changes which
attract attention and which create an appearance of change in its underlying purpose.
Fashions and styles may change, but children still read, firstly in order to learn to
read, and then for information and amusement. The author contends that, in reality a
limited number of changes are possible in the purpose of children‘s literature, and the
age-old arguments likewise continue about what those are: entertainment or
preparation for the harsh realities of life, retreat into fantasy and acceptance of one‘s
place or incitement to rebel and change the world. / Information Science / D.Litt. et Phil.
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The effects of social and political dislocation on Persianate children's literature : change and continuityAbdelsadek, Nafisa 02 1900 (has links)
This thesis seeks to investigate the various forces that have shaped modern
Persianate children‘s literature - history, revolution, political climate, government,
institutions, writers, education, and so on. The historical origins of tales popular in
modern times, and of themes recurrent in stories from past times to present are
analyzed, along with other factors which have shaped Persianate children‘s literature.
The thesis begins with a historical and theoretical overview relating to change
and continuity in Persianate children‘s literature. It examines the influence of ancient
texts on modern Persianate children‘s stories. The cultural development reflected in
the organizational infrastructure of institutions is also examined, as well as other
contemporary influences, both social and political, in order to assess how these have
affected modern Persianate children‘s literature. The contents of children‘s books are
analyzed from different aspects, including their representation of social values.
Concerns of children themselves are shown in examples of their own work; in
addition, works of illustrators of children‘s books, and examples from the extended
body of Persianate children‘s literature in Tajikistan are analyzed.
Modern children‘s literature is the product of a number of influences and
while differences can be perceived between historical periods, underlying similarities
can also be seen which show a continuity of socio-political purpose, either
supporting the status quo or challenging it. The thesis is concerned with this interplay
between the recurring uses of children‘s literature; moralistic, didactic, the political
agenda of its authors, criticism of the status quo, etc. and the surface changes which
attract attention and which create an appearance of change in its underlying purpose.
Fashions and styles may change, but children still read, firstly in order to learn to
read, and then for information and amusement. The author contends that, in reality a
limited number of changes are possible in the purpose of children‘s literature, and the
age-old arguments likewise continue about what those are: entertainment or
preparation for the harsh realities of life, retreat into fantasy and acceptance of one‘s
place or incitement to rebel and change the world. / Information Science / D.Litt. et Phil.
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Quṭb al‐Dīn al‐Shīrāzī and His Political, Religious, and Intellectual NetworksDreyer, Carina 26 May 2023 (has links) (PDF)
This thesis follows Quṭb al‐Dīn al‐Shīrāzī (d. 1311), a brilliant and influential polymath, through the eighty years of his long life and focuses on him navigating changing environments in the Persianate Mongol world (i.e., the second half of the thirteenth century to the early decades of the fourteenth century). In order to retrace his life, this study draws extensively on contemporary chronicles, biographical dictionaries, autobiographies, hagiographies, and some of his own manuscripts to illuminate parts of his life unknown before. Through that, this thesis illustrates Quṭb al‐Dīn al‐Shīrāzī’s intellectual, political, and religious networks, with special attention to his patrons. Moreover, even though his fame in the modern world is primarily due to his astronomical treatises as part of the Maragha school, my thesis demonstrates his investment in medicine, Sufism, and religious sciences, including jurisprudence, Qurʼān interpretations, and ḥadīth studies.
Hence, Quṭb al-Dīn is an example of an intellectual in the Ilkhanid realm who developed informal networks transcending political, linguistic, and genre boundaries, that spanned an area from the western fringes of Anatolia to Khorasan, through bustling late medieval metropolises such as Shiraz, Sivas, Konya, Baghdad, Cairo, Tabriz, and Maragha.
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