Item Details
Skip Navigation Links
   ActiveUsers:1114Hits:18610334Skip Navigation Links
Show My Basket
Contact Us
IDSA Web Site
Ask Us
Today's News
HelpExpand Help
Advanced search

In Basket
  Article   Article
 

ID137391
Title ProperFraming the unframable in Ferdowsi's Shahnameh
LanguageENG
AuthorGabri, Richard
Summary / Abstract (Note)This paper explores the ways in which the Shahnameh thematizes the poet's fraught relationship with language to not only complicate our overall understanding of the epic poem but also our understanding of the language which makes the poem, and the world outside the poem, intelligible. Through a close reading of some of the prologues and epilogues that frame the Shahnameh’s tales, this essay argues that rather than helping us understand how to interpret the epic's morally ambiguous tales, the frames to Ferdowsi's tales, ironically represent a narrator who is in no position to offer us any help. Of course, the poet does give us clues as to why he and consequently we are “helpless” (bichāreh) when it comes to understanding his tales, which, in its own way, can be considered helpful. What seems to hinder understanding at every turn for the poet is, paradoxically, the very language or speech (sakhon/sokhan) that makes understanding possible in the first place.
`In' analytical NoteIranian Studies Vol. 48, No.3; May 2015: p.423-441
Journal SourceIranian Studies 2015-06 48, 3
Key WordsPhilosophy ;  Language ;  Time ;  Fate ;  Speech ;  Prologue ;  Hermeneutics ;  Theodicy ;  Irony