Antar

Antar
Author: Terrick Hamilton
Publisher:
Total Pages: 368
Release: 1819
Genre:
ISBN:

Antar: the Black Knight

Antar: the Black Knight
Author: NNEDI. OKORAFOR
Publisher:
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2019
Genre:
ISBN: 9781684053735

Discover a legend in this epic and empowering debut graphic novel from Hugo, Nebula, and World Fantasy Award-winning author Nnedi Okorafor. Honor through perseverance. Legacy through diversity. Resonating for centuries, this is the epic story of one of history's greatest warriors and finest poets: Antar the Black Knight. A despised camel driver born of an African slave mother and an Arab Noble father, Antar proves that heroes are made by embracing who we are and dreaming about what we can become. Nnedi Okorafor is an international award-winning novelist of African-based science fiction, fantasy, and magical realism for both children and adults. She has won multiple awards for her books including Who Fears Death (a World Fantasy Award winner for Best Novel), Zahrah the Windseeker (winner of the Wole Soyinka Prize for African Literature), the BintiTrilogy (the first of which won both Hugo and Nebula Awards), and her children's book Chicken in the Kitchen (winner of an Africana Book Award).

The Arabian Epic: Volume 2, Analysis

The Arabian Epic: Volume 2, Analysis
Author: Malcolm Cameron Lyons
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Total Pages: 510
Release: 1995-07-20
Genre: History
ISBN: 9780521474498

The hero cycles of Arabic belong to the literary tradition of The Arabian Nights and can be seen as the popular epics of their civilisation. The second volume analyses their contents and literary formulae.

The Romance of Antar

The Romance of Antar
Author: Terrick Hamilton
Publisher: CreateSpace
Total Pages: 184
Release: 2014-03-27
Genre:
ISBN: 9781484918562

IT is generally believed that this celebrated Arabian Romance was composed, in the eighth century, from traditionary tales which had been long current in the East, by El-Asma'ee, a famous philologist and poet at the court of Haroon Er-Rasheed. Other authors and sources (for instance, Johainah and Abu Obeidah) are mentioned in the work, but these, according to Von Hammer, have been inserted by story-tellers in the coffeehouses. Lane, in his admirable work on the Modern Egyptians, remarks that the 'Ulama (learned men) 'in general despise the romance, and ridicule the assertion that El-Asma'ee was its author': their opinion, however, on a question of this kind, is of little value. The complete work is usually bound up in forty-five volumes of various sizes-presenting a mass sufficient to appal the most indefatigable of translators; not to speak of the impossibility of finding European readers who would wade through the translation, if published. An abridged copy of this voluminous work, done by some learned Syrians (and hence called the Shamiyeh, or Syrian Antar, to distinguish it from the original, which was known as the Hijaziyeh, or Arabian Antar), having been obtained by Mr Terrick Hamilton, during his residence at Constantinople, in his capacity of Oriental Secretary to the British Embassy there, he was induced by its comparative brevity to undertake the task of translating it into English.

The Arabian Epic: Volume 3, Texts

The Arabian Epic: Volume 3, Texts
Author: M. C. Lyons
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Total Pages: 676
Release: 2005-06-17
Genre: History
ISBN: 9780521017404

The hero cycles of Arabic belong to the literary tradition of The Arabian Nights and can be seen as the popular epics of their civilisation. The Arabian epic covers ten of the main representatives of this genre. Each of these has been developed through the processes of accretive oral story-telling by means of an accumulation of narrative and folklore motifs, many of which belong to what can be seen as a universal tradition. The work is published in three volumes. The first volume introduces the background and the dimensions in which the cycles are set, while the second volume analyses their contents and the literary formulae used in their construction, as well as listing analogues found in other literatures. The epitomes surveyed in the final volume provide non-Arabists with a more immediate insight into the contents of the cycles, drawing attention to their narrative colouring and texture.

Arabic Literature in the Post-Classical Period

Arabic Literature in the Post-Classical Period
Author: Roger Allen
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Total Pages: 419
Release: 2006-04-13
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 1139936468

The final volume of The Cambridge History of Arabic Literature explores the Arabic literary heritage of the little-known period from the twelfth to the beginning of the nineteenth century. Even though it was during this time that the famous Thousand and One Nights was composed, very little has been written on the literature of the period generally. In this volume Roger Allen and Donald Richards bring together some of the most distinguished scholars in the field to rectify the situation. The volume is divided into parts with the traditions of poetry and prose covered separately within both their 'elite' and 'popular' contexts. The last two sections are devoted to drama and the indigenous tradition of literary criticism. As the only work of its kind in English covering the post-classical period, this book promises to be a unique resource for students and scholars of Arabic literature for many years to come.