Middle Eastern literature.
Overview
Works: | 43 works in 0 publications in 0 languages |
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Titles
In the eye of the beholder: Quantificational, pragmatic and aspectual features of the *bi-√ verbal prefix in Sumerian.
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Negotiating Rationality in Modern Times: Emergence and Development of the Turkish Novel.
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Re-reading al-T&dotbelow;abari: Towards a narratological interpretation of the "History".
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Bâzgasht-i Adabi (Literary Return) and Persianate Literary Culture in Eighteenth and Nineteenth Century Iran, India, and Afghanistan.
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The Medieval Reception of Firdausi's Shahnama : The Ardashir Cycle as a Mirror for Princes.
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Development of the ghazal and Khaqani's contribution: A study on the development of ghazal and a literary exegesis of a 12th c. poetic harbinger.
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The Construction of Arab Women's Identities to Resist Patriarchal Oppressions in Selected Arab/Arab Diasporic Women's Novels.
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The Anthology of the Female Short Story in Saudi Arabia : = Thick Translation as Cultural Preservation, Representation, and Exposure.
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Speaking for Voiceless Women : = A Comparative Study of Nizar Qabbani's and Zhai Yongming's Poetry.
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"Reading with My Eyes Closed" Arabic Literature as a Site for Engagement with Alterity : = An Ethnographic Study of Arabic Literature Collegiate Classroom.
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Mongol money : = The role of Tabriz from Chingiz Khan to Uljaytu 616 to 709 AH/1220 to 1309 AD.
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"Darkness, dirt, deviance"---and daddy: Patrilineal relationships and the negotiation of womanhood in the literature of Middle Eastern and Arab-American women.
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Contested Masculinities: Modernity, Gender, and Canon in the Turkish Novel.
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A study and translation of the first book of the first volume of the "Compendium of Histories" by Rasid al-Din Fadl Allah concerning the Turkish and Mongol tribes.
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Metadrama, the poetics of disguise in Alfred Farag's drama of the seventies.
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Perception of Arabic Folktales by Readers of Different Language/Cultural Backgrounds.
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More Than the Sum of Its Parts: Animal Categories and Accretive Logic in Volume One of al-Jah&dotbelow;iz&dotbelow;'s "Kitab al-H&dotbelow;ayawan"
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The Intellectual Struggle of Murad Ramzi(1855-1935): An Early 20th Century Eurasian Muslim Author.
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"The Vision of Theophilus": Resistance through orality among the persecuted Copts.
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Schreiben als Selbstbehauptung: Kulturkonflikt und Identitaet in den Werken von Aysel Oezakin, Alev Tekinay und Emine Sevgi Oezdamar.
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Kabbalistic and depth psychological motifs in Lecha Dodi: A hermeneutical analysis of a Jewish poem.
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Berbers, Buddhists and Bibelots: Appropriation of alien traditions by French, Chinese, Arab and Francophone poets.
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A place between two places: The Qur'an's intermediate state and the early history of the Barzakh.
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Spoken Word and Ritual Performance: The Oath and the Curse in Deuteronomy 27-28.
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Tribal poetics in early Arabic culture: The case of Ash'ar al-Hudhaliyyin.
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Family narratives and the transmission of heritage in transcultural novels.
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Transnational memories of the self: Reflections on postcommunist and postcolonial life-writing by women.
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"Muslim Thought: Its Origin and Achievements," by M. M. Sharif---Edited, with notes, bibliography and introduction.
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Speaking Laterally: Transnational Poetics and the Rise of Modern Arabic and Persian Poetry in Iraq and Iran.
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Towards a Critical Awareness of Worldliness: A. H. Tanpinar's "Huzur", Mahmoud Darwish's "Memory for Forgetfulness", and Virginia Woolf's "Mrs. Dalloway".
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Nationalism, secularism, belonging, and identity in Philip Roth, Salman Rushdie, and Orhan Pamuk.
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The Writer and the Nation-State: Language, Aesthetics, Ideology and Power in Turkish Literature (1927-2015).
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Many Peoples of Obscure Speech and Difficult Language: Attitudes Towards Linguistic Diversity in the Hebrew Bible.
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The Role of Tribalism and Sectarianism in Defining the Iraqi National Identity.
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