The epistles in this volume deal with life and death, pleasure and pain, and the diversity of languages. Written in a lively and genial style, they are less technical than other epistles in the Ras¿'il. While drawing on antiquity and early Islamic teachings, they are often playful, enlivening their arguments with fables and parables.
The epistles in this volume deal with life and death, pleasure and pain, and the diversity of languages. Written in a lively and genial style, they are less technical than other epistles in the Ras¿'il. While drawing on antiquity and early Islamic teachings, they are often playful, enlivening their arguments with fables and parables.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Eric Ormsby was educated at Columbia University, the University of Pennsylvania, and Princeton University (PhD, 1981). He has had a varied and distinguished career, teaching for twenty years at McGill University, Montreal, where from 1996 he was Professor and Director of the Institute of Islamic Studies. From 2005 until 2013, he worked at the Institute of Ismaili Studies, London, first as a Senior Research Associate and then as Chief Librarian. In addition to his extensive publications on Classical Arabic literature and Islamic thought, and his translations from Arabic, Persian, French and German, he has published seven poetry collections. He is also an essayist and reviewer and the author of critical works on poetry and translation.
Inhaltsangabe
* Foreword * Introduction to Epistles 29-31 * Technical Notes to Epistles 29-31 * Epistle 29: Translation * Epistle 30: Translation * Epistle 31: Translation * Index * Bibliography * Arabic Edition of Ris la 29 * Arabic Edition of Ris la 30 * Arabic Edition of Ris la 31 * Arabic Index