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Considered by Rumi to be "the master" of Sufi mystic poetry, Attar
is best known for his epic poem The Conference of the Birds, a
magnificent allegorical tale about the soul's search for meaning.
The poem recounts the perilous journey of the world's birds to the
faraway peaks of Mount Qaf, in search of the mysterious Simurgh,
their king. Attar's beguiling anecdotes and humour intermingle the
sublime with the mundane, the spiritual with the worldly, and the
religious with the metaphysical. Reflecting the entire evolution of
Sufi mystic tradition, Attar's poem models the soul's escape from
the mind's rational embrace. Sholeh Wolpe re-creates the beauty of
the original Persian in contemporary English verse and poetic
prose, capturing for the first time the beauty and timeless wisdom
of Attar's masterpiece for modern readers.
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New Iranian Plays (Paperback)
Torange Yeghiazarian; Introduction by Nazanin Sahamizadeh; Sholeh Wolpe, Nagmeh Samini, Mohammad Yaghoubi, …
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R512
R464
Discovery Miles 4 640
Save R48 (9%)
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Ships in 9 - 15 working days
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Introduced by Farindokht Zahedi, Associate Professor, College of
Fine Arts / Theater / Faculty of Performing Arts and Music,
University of Tehran. Editors Aubrey Mellor and Cheryl Robson. A
wide-ranging collection of plays from new and established voices
from today's Iran and the global Iranian diaspora. Plays cover life
in contemporary Iran, the hopes of women finding new ways to assert
their individuality in a time of great of upheaval, the lives of
those trapped in a migrant camp and the need to challenge
stereotypical views. The plays shine a light on a rapidly changing
Iran, one that is vastly different from the misconceptions
outsiders have of it. Includes: A Moment of Silence by Mohammad
Yaghoubi - (Iran) Home by Naghmeh Samini - (Iran) Shame by Sholeh
Wolpe -(Iran-USA) Manus by Leila Hekmatnia (Iran), Keyvan
Sarreshteh (Iran), Nazanin Sahamizadeh (Australia) Isfahan Blues
Torange Yeghiazarian - (Iran-USA) Editors: Aubrey Mellor Aubrey is
a leading Australian Theatre Director. Currently Senior Fellow at
LASALLE, in Singapore, he was the first Australian to study Asian
writing. Formerly Director of the Australian National Institute of
Dramatic Art (NIDA), he is well-known as an acting teacher to a
generation of acclaimed Australian actors. He has directed for all
major companies, commissioned and premiered plays by Australia's
leading playwrights and is a leading proponent of new Australian
writing. Aubrey founded several writing awards for playwrights and
is an advisor to arts bodies including the Performing Arts Board of
The Australia Council and The Australian National Playwright's
Conference. Awards include the OAM in 1992, the Australian Writer's
Guild's Dorothy Crawford Award for services to Playwriting and the
International Theatre Institute's Uchimura Prize for best
production, Tokyo International Festival. Cheryl Robson Cheryl has
edited several collections of international drama. After studying
drama at Bristol University, she worked for the BBC and as a film
lecturer. She founded the Virginia Prize for Fiction in 2009 in the
UK. She is an award-winning playwright who has received Arts
Council UK commission and option awards and had several plays
produced. She ran a theatre company for several years in London,
developing and producing international plays by women. She has won
numerous awards for her filmmaking and was recently named a
finalist in the ITV National Diversity awards - Lifetime
Achievement. .
Albert Einstein said, "Not everything that can be counted counts,
and not everything that counts can be counted." It is in this vein
that Sholeh WolpE's mesmerizing memoir in verse unfolds. In this
lyrical and candid work, her fifth collection of poems, WolpE
invokes the abacus as an instrument of remembering. Through
different countries and cultures, she carries us bead by bead on a
journey of loss and triumph, love and exile. In the end, the tally
is insight, not numbers, and we arrive at a place where nothing is
too small for gratitude.
"Keeping Time with Blue Hyacinths," Sholeh Wolpe's third collection
of poems, is a surreal journey of sorrows and sins, of love,
ghosts, and Saudi princes, of banishment inside one's own skin.
Wild in its leaps and images, these poems explore personal and
psychological exile from a marriage, lovers, expectations, and
finally, country."
Winner of the 2010 Lois Roth Persian Translation Prize Sin includes
the entirety of Farrokhzad's last book, numerous selections from
her fourth and most enduring book, Reborn, and selections from her
earlier work, and creates a collection that is true to the meaning,
the intention, and the music of the original poems.
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