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Erotic Persian / Paul Sprachman.

By: Material type: TextTextPublisher: Costa Mesa, California : Mazda Publishers, Inc., 2020Copyright date: ©2020Description: xxxii, 205, 84 pages : color facsimiles ; 31 cmContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • unmediated
Carrier type:
  • volume
ISBN:
  • 9781568592749
  • 1568592744
Subject(s): Genre/Form: DDC classification:
  • 891/.55093538 23
LOC classification:
  • PK6412.E76 S67 2020
Contents:
Introduction -- The Eroticism of Obsessive Piety and Transgressive Impiety -- Canonical Erotic Literature -- Alfiyeh va Shalfiyeh: Pornography in Aid of Sexual Dysfunction and Sex Education -- Erotic Literature in the Modern Period -- Erotic Persian in Exile -- In Closing.
Summary: "This book is a general survey of language and images that arouse sexual desire. The book begins by examining the works of the great Persian poets and prose authors who avoid direct mention of bodily functions and use imagery borrowed from nature and food when describing the charms of lovers and human sexual activity. The examination shows how erotic imagery, at one time innovative, hardened into clichés over centuries of repeated use. The book's focus on the semantics of allusive Persian also leads to a general notion of what makes one poem or piece of prose sexually stimulating and another inspirational. Here "Erotic Persian" joins an ongoing controversy: namely, to what extent are some of the works of great Sufi authors like Rumi, Sa`di, Hafez, etc. erotic? Dealing with both the pleasures of the flesh and the spirit? The book asks: Can certain works be at once carnal and spiritual? The prevailing view frowns on such interpretations, insisting great authors never wrote solely to arouse readers' desires. If erotic material found its way into the canon, many assert, it was there merely to divert the reader's or listener's attention away from the everyday and direct it toward spiritual truths"-- Provided by publisher.

Includes bibliographical references and index.

Introduction -- The Eroticism of Obsessive Piety and Transgressive Impiety -- Canonical Erotic Literature -- Alfiyeh va Shalfiyeh: Pornography in Aid of Sexual Dysfunction and Sex Education -- Erotic Literature in the Modern Period -- Erotic Persian in Exile -- In Closing.

"This book is a general survey of language and images that arouse sexual desire. The book begins by examining the works of the great Persian poets and prose authors who avoid direct mention of bodily functions and use imagery borrowed from nature and food when describing the charms of lovers and human sexual activity. The examination shows how erotic imagery, at one time innovative, hardened into clichés over centuries of repeated use. The book's focus on the semantics of allusive Persian also leads to a general notion of what makes one poem or piece of prose sexually stimulating and another inspirational. Here "Erotic Persian" joins an ongoing controversy: namely, to what extent are some of the works of great Sufi authors like Rumi, Sa`di, Hafez, etc. erotic? Dealing with both the pleasures of the flesh and the spirit? The book asks: Can certain works be at once carnal and spiritual? The prevailing view frowns on such interpretations, insisting great authors never wrote solely to arouse readers' desires. If erotic material found its way into the canon, many assert, it was there merely to divert the reader's or listener's attention away from the everyday and direct it toward spiritual truths"-- Provided by publisher.

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