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Introduction: Ali and Nino as World Literature
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Carl Niekerk
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Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- Acknowledgments vii
- Notes on Editions of and References to Ali and Nino ix
- Introduction: Ali and Nino as World Literature 1
- 1: Ali and Nino: The Novel as/of Cultural Translation 15
- 2: Crossing Borders, Crossing Disciplines: Ali and Nino in the Twenty-First Century 29
- 3: Glowing Rubies and Persian Daggers: The Role of Persian Poetry in Ali and Nino 50
- 4: Gendered Stereotypes and Cross- Cultural Moral Values through the Eyes of Kurban Said 73
- 5: Orientalist Itineraries: Cultural Hegemony, Gender, Race, and Religion in Ali and Nino 89
- 6: Gendered Conflicts in Muslim and Christian Cultures: Honor (and Shame) in Ali and Nino 114
- 7: Love and Politics: Retelling History in Ali and Nino and Artush and Zaur 135
- 8: “Herr Professor, Please: We’d Rather Stay in Asia”: Ali Khan Shirvanshir and the Spaces of Baku 152
- 9: The Female Body and the Seduction of Modernity in Ali and Nino 168
- 10: Seeing the Unseen: Symbolic Writing in Ali and Nino 189
- 11: Ali and Nino and Jewish Questions 210
- 12: Between Orientalism and Occidentalism: Culture, Identity, and the “Clash of Civilizations” in Ali and Nino 227
- Works Cited 251
- Contributors 263
- Index 269
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- Acknowledgments vii
- Notes on Editions of and References to Ali and Nino ix
- Introduction: Ali and Nino as World Literature 1
- 1: Ali and Nino: The Novel as/of Cultural Translation 15
- 2: Crossing Borders, Crossing Disciplines: Ali and Nino in the Twenty-First Century 29
- 3: Glowing Rubies and Persian Daggers: The Role of Persian Poetry in Ali and Nino 50
- 4: Gendered Stereotypes and Cross- Cultural Moral Values through the Eyes of Kurban Said 73
- 5: Orientalist Itineraries: Cultural Hegemony, Gender, Race, and Religion in Ali and Nino 89
- 6: Gendered Conflicts in Muslim and Christian Cultures: Honor (and Shame) in Ali and Nino 114
- 7: Love and Politics: Retelling History in Ali and Nino and Artush and Zaur 135
- 8: “Herr Professor, Please: We’d Rather Stay in Asia”: Ali Khan Shirvanshir and the Spaces of Baku 152
- 9: The Female Body and the Seduction of Modernity in Ali and Nino 168
- 10: Seeing the Unseen: Symbolic Writing in Ali and Nino 189
- 11: Ali and Nino and Jewish Questions 210
- 12: Between Orientalism and Occidentalism: Culture, Identity, and the “Clash of Civilizations” in Ali and Nino 227
- Works Cited 251
- Contributors 263
- Index 269