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Reconfiguring and Appropriating Arabic, Persian, and Indic Literary Traditions in Seventeenth- And Eighteenth-Century Britain: Orientalism and the Rec

Reconfiguring and Appropriating Arabic, Persian, and Indic Literary Traditions in Seventeenth- And Eighteenth-Century Britain: Orientalism and the Rec - Hardcover

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Availability:In StockContributor:Claire GallienPublish date:7/17/2025Pages:512
Language:EnglishPublisher:Oxford University PressISBN-13:9780198908401ISBN-10:198908407UPC:9780198908401Book Category:Literary Criticism, ReligionBook Subcategory:Renaissance, IslamSize:8.60 x 6.30 x 1.00 inchesWeight:2.2024Product ID:SCGN81ZX7W
Reconfiguring and Appropriating Arabic, Persian, and Indic Literary Traditions in Seventeenth- and Eighteenth-Century Britain investigates the reconfigurations of literary traditions coming from Islamicate regions of the world by British orientalists. Claire Gallien explores the logics of orientalist selection, reconfiguration, and appropriation of Islamicate literary canons, and focuses on the period going from the endowment of the first chairs in Arabic at Cambridge and Oxford in 1632 and 1636 respectively to the establishment of the Asiatic Society in Calcutta in 1784, presided by Sir William Jones until 1794. Contrary to the Saidian premise of an invention of the East by the West, Gallien argues that orientalists did not invent a canon but they transferred and translated texts and authors, which/who were already recognised as canonical across Islamicate literary cultures. Given the above, the question that preoccupies this book is what happens to the canon when partially re-created and re-purposed for European readers.

Organised in three main parts, this book analyses first the constitution of collections of Arabic, Persian, and Indic manuscripts and their cataloguing in England in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. The second part investigates the variety of linguistic and literary partitioning and assemblage proposed by orientalists and discusses how their classical literary formation underpinned theories and practices of imitation, translation, and writing. The third part examines the editing and translating of Arabic, Persian, and Indic literatures in seventeenth- and eighteenth-century England as well as in British colonial India, and in particular the function of specimens and anthologies in the constitution of a corpus of Eastern literatures in English.
Language:EnglishPublisher:Oxford University PressISBN-13:9780198908401ISBN-10:198908407UPC:9780198908401Book Category:Literary Criticism, ReligionBook Subcategory:Renaissance, IslamSize:8.60 x 6.30 x 1.00 inchesWeight:2.2024Product ID:SCGN81ZX7W
Claire Gallien, Senior Lecturer, University of Montpellier

Claire Gallien has lectured in France at the University of Montpellier in English Studies since 2011 and has developed research expertise in the fields of early modern British orientalism, postcolonial and decolonial literatures and theories, translation studies, Arabic studies, as well as Islamic epistemology, theology, and Sufism. She was awarded the Edward W. Said Fellowship in 2017 and the Bahari Fellowship in 2022 for her research on early modern collections of Islamic literature. Her work has been published in distinguished international journals and academic presses.
Publisher: Oxford University Press

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Claire Gallien

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