0
Your cart

Your cart is empty

Browse All Departments
  • All Departments
Price
  • R250 - R500 (1)
  • -
Status
Brand

Showing 1 - 1 of 1 matches in All Departments

The Incomparable Festival (A masterpiece of Indo-Islamic literary culture) (Paperback): Mir Yar Ali "Jan Sahib" Sahib" The Incomparable Festival (A masterpiece of Indo-Islamic literary culture) (Paperback)
Mir Yar Ali "Jan Sahib" Sahib"; Edited by Razak Khan; Translated by Shad Naved
R355 Discovery Miles 3 550 Ships in 12 - 17 working days

The Incomparable Festival (Musaddas Tahniyat-e-Jashn-e-Benazir) by Mir Yar Ali (whose pen name was Jan Sahib) is a little known but sumptuous masterpiece of Indo-Islamic literary culture, presented here for the first time in English translation. The long poem, written in rhyming sestet stanzas, is about the royal festival popularly called jashn-e-benazir(the incomparable festival), inaugurated in 1866 by the Nawab Kalb-e-Ali Khan (r. 1865-87) with the aim of promoting art, culture and trade in his kingdom at Rampur in northern India. The task of commemorating the sights and wonders of the festival was given to the hugely popular writer of rekhti verse, the tart and playful sub-genre of the ghazal, reflecting popular women's speech, of which Jan Sahib is one of the last practitioners. Structured as an ode to the nawab, the poem is a world-album depicting various classes on the cusp of social upheaval. They include the elite, distinguished artists and commoners, brought together at the festivities, blurring the distinction between poetry, history and biography, and between poetic convention and social description. The book is a veritable archive of the legendary khayal singers, percussionists, and instrumentalists, courtesans, boy-dancers, poets, storytellers (dastango) and reciters of elegies (marsiyago). But, above all, the poem gives voice to the 'lowest' denizens of the marketplace by bringing to light their culinary tastes, artisanal products, religious rituals and beliefs, and savoury idioms, thereby focusing on identities of caste and gender in early modern society. This Penguin Classics edition will be of interest not just to the Urdu and Hindi literary historian, but to specialists and readers interested in the histories of music, dance, and the performative arts, as well as scholars of gender and sexuality in South Asia. Lovers of Urdu poetry will find in it a forgotten masterpiece

Free Delivery
Pinterest Twitter Facebook Google+
You may like...
The Land Is Ours - Black Lawyers And The…
Tembeka Ngcukaitobi Paperback  (11)
R380 R297 Discovery Miles 2 970
Extremisms In Africa
Alain Tschudin, Stephen Buchanan-Clarke, … Paperback  (1)
R320 R250 Discovery Miles 2 500
They Called Me Queer
Kim Windvogel, Kelly-Eve Koopman Paperback R320 R275 Discovery Miles 2 750
Introductory Statistics Achieve access…
Stephen Kokoska Mixed media product R2,433 Discovery Miles 24 330
Fatal Numbers: Why Count on Chance
Hans Magnus Enzensberger Paperback R363 R306 Discovery Miles 3 060
The Practice of Statistics for Business…
David S Moore, George P. McCabe, … Mixed media product R2,433 Discovery Miles 24 330
Big Data Analytics - Digital Marketing…
Mansaf Alam, Kiran Chaudhary Hardcover R2,250 R2,035 Discovery Miles 20 350
Sala Kahle, District Six
Nomvuyo Ngcelwane Paperback R376 Discovery Miles 3 760
First Course in Probability, A, Global…
Sheldon Ross Paperback R2,069 Discovery Miles 20 690
Song For Sarah - Lessons From My Mother
Jonathan Jansen, Naomi Jansen Hardcover  (3)
R90 R71 Discovery Miles 710

 

Partners