Persian literature

Persian literature

Introduction

      body of writings in New Persian (also called Modern Persian), the form of the Persian language written since the 9th century with a slightly extended form of the Arabic alphabet and with many Arabic loanwords. The literary form of New Persian is known as Farsī in Iran, where it is the country's official language, and as Darī (Dari language) in Afghanistan (where it and Pashto (Pashto language) are official languages); it is written with a Cyrillic alphabet by Tajiks in Tajikistan and Uzbekistan. For centuries New Persian has also been a prestigious cultural language in western Central Asia, on the Indian subcontinent, and in Turkey.

Background

Ancient Iran
      The Iranian languages belong, together with the Indo-Aryan languages of the Indian subcontinent, to one of the oldest branches of the Indo-European linguistic family. There exist documents written in the Old Iranian languages that have survived for nearly three millennia. The oldest texts are the Gāthās, 16 (or perhaps 17) short hymns written in an archaic form of an Old Iranian language called Avestan (Avestan language), named for the Avesta, the holy book of Zoroastrianism. The Gāthās have been handed down as a part of the Avesta along with several more recent texts. It is generally accepted that they contain the original teachings of the prophet Zoroaster (Zarathustra), who lived in the first half of the 1st millennium BCE. His hymns show traces of versification, the precise prosody of which is still imperfectly known. Also important to early Iranian literature are the remnants of ancient myths preserved in the Avesta, especially in the yashts, which are texts addressed to Iranian deities. The names of several kings and heroes who later appear as semihistorical figures in Persian epic poetry are also here mentioned; the myths to which these texts refer were well known to the original audience but are now lost.

      The only other Old Iranian language found in extant texts is the Old Persian used by the Achaemenian (Achaemenian Dynasty) kings for inscriptions in cuneiform writing (6th–4th century BCE). These inscriptions contain royal edicts and similar texts composed in a very formal style; they contributed little to the development of literature in Iran. However, in some collateral sources (including the Bible) there are indications that epic literature existed in the oral tradition of reciters at court.

      The conquest of the Achaemenian Empire by Alexander the Great about 330 BCE caused a radical break in Iranian culture. During the new era, which lasted until the Arab conquest of the 7th century CE, Iran was deeply influenced by Hellenism. Greek and Aramaic became the dominant languages. For almost 500 years Iranian languages were not used in writing. The oldest preserved documents that use Middle Iranian languages date only from the 3rd century CE. They consist of inscriptions of the Sāsānian (Sāsānian dynasty) kings and religious texts of the Manichaeans, the followers of the gnostic prophet Mani (3rd century CE). The most widely used written language was Middle Persian, better known as Pahlavi, which remained in use with the Zoroastrians into Islamic times. Only a few literary works have survived from this period, notably two episodes later incorporated into the Iranian epic as it was recorded by Ferdowsī in the 11th-century Shāh-nāmeh (see below Shāh-nāmeh (Persian literature)): Ayādgār-i Zarērān (“Memorial of Zarēr”), about the establishment of Zoroastrianism, and Kārnāmag-ī Ardāshīr, on the founder of the Sāsānian dynasty. The myths, legends, and romanticized historical tales of this epic tradition were probably assembled into a continuous story in the early 7th century CE under the last Sāsānian king. After the coming of Islam, this text was translated from Pahlavi into Arabic prose. Both versions were later lost, but their contents survived in the works of historians writing in Arabic.

      Lyrical poetry was still an oral tradition of minstrels, even at the royal court, and has left no traces. Texts written in other Middle Iranian languages, such as Sogdian and Khotanese Saka, had no more than a marginal influence on the literature of the Islamic period.

The Arab invasion
      The Sāsānian empire, which at the beginning of the 7th century was still one of the two great powers in the Middle East, crumbled almost instantaneously when the Bedouin invaded Iran. The conquest was completed about 640. The Caliphate that came to be established was an Islamic state ruled by Arabs, but very soon non-Arabs who had assimilated themselves to the new situation began to participate in the affairs of the Muslim community. The contribution made by the descendants of the Sāsānian elite to the development of the political and administrative institutions of the Caliphate increased in the 8th century after Baghdad was founded as the capital of the Abbāsid Dynastyʿ, close to the place where the Sāsānian kings once had their palace. Iranians contributed much to the development of the scholarly traditions of Islam. The linguistic and literary sciences dealt primarily with the Qurʾān and with the poetry of the pre-Islamic Arabs, both of which provided the norms for classical Arabic and its use in Arabic literature. These sciences included, on the one hand, grammar and lexicography and, on the other, the theories of metrics, rhyme, and rhetorics. They also included philological conventions for the collection, arrangement, and preservation of texts. Together these constituted a tradition of dealing with literary texts that became a model to all literatures that subsequently emerged in the Islamic world. Among its features were the divan (dīwān)—the collection of one poet's output in a systematically arranged volume—and several types of anthologies. Tools of this kind were important for the preservation of literature and its distribution to outlying parts of an extensive empire. They also contributed to the standardization of form and style in poetry.

      During the early ʿAbbāsid period (8th–9th centuries), the activity of translators was lively. Particularly famous was the book of Indian fables known as Kalīlah wa Dimnah (“Kalīlah and Dimnah”), which in the 6th century had been translated from Sanskrit to Middle Persian. Ibn al-Muqaffaʿ made an Arabic version during the 8th century that was later retranslated into Persian. He also translated the Khwatāy-nāmak (“Book of Kings”), a compilation of the stories about the kings of Iran put together in Sāsānian times. This mostly legendary history of ancient Iran found a place in Islamic historiography and literature in particular on account of its value as an example of the “mirror for princes” genre (collections of texts intended to demonstrate the principles of proper kingship).

The emergence of New Persian
      Persian was the first language in Muslim civilization to break through Arabic's monopoly on writing. Already under the Sāsānians a standard form of Persian had come into being that was called Fārsī-yi Darī (“Persian of the Court”). From the centre of the empire it had spread to the provinces and had even marginalized other Iranian languages with a tradition of writing, such as Sogdian in Central Asia. In the course of the 9th century this prestigious variant of Persian emerged again as a written language in the Iranian lands that were farthest from Baghdad, the centre of ʿAbbāsid power. This New Persian (as it is called by linguists) did not differ very much from the Middle Persian of the Sāsānian period except in its vocabulary. Three centuries of Arabic hegemony had caused an influx of Arabic loanwords, which amounted to about half of the total word material of Persian. The Persian alphabet was also borrowed from the Arabs with the addition of only a few signs for Persian sounds unknown to Arabic. All Arabic loanwords retained their original orthography whatever their pronunciation in Persian might be.

      The emergence of written Persian was facilitated by the political fragmentation of the Caliphate. From the 9th century onward, a number of semi-independent rulers came to power who only in name accepted the suzerainty of the ʿAbbāsids. The most successful were the Sāmānid (Sāmānid Dynasty) emirs of Bukhara in western Central Asia. In the 10th century they controlled most of eastern Iran and present-day Afghanistan. The Sāmānids belonged to the local Iranian aristocracy and even claimed a pedigree going back to the Sāsānian kings. Though they remained faithful to Islam, they did much to promote the literary use of Persian and the survival of Iranian traditions. Balʿamī, one of their officials, adapted in Persian two important works by al-Ṭabarī (Ṭabarī, aṭ-), a native Persian writing in the early 10th century exclusively in Arabic: a commentary on the Qurʾān and a huge chronicle of Islamic history that included an account of the ancient kings of Iran. At the same time, the writing of poetry in Persian was established as a court tradition. The works of the Sāmānids have been preserved only as fragments, but they show clearly that already in the 10th century most of the formal and generic characteristics of classical Persian poetry were in use.

Classical poetry
      The classical Persian poets and theoreticians saw the aim of their art primarily as the continuation of Arabic poetry in another language. For them, poems that were not written according to the rules of Arabic prosody did not count as serious poetry. It is difficult to assess in detail what has survived from pre-Islamic Iranian poetry because so little is known about oral Middle Persian poetry. One of the essential differences between classical Persian poetry and pre-Islamic literature was precisely the introduction of the recording in writing of poems composed on principles already evolved in Arabic philology.

      The prosody of classical Persian verse is based on the distich, called a bayt, which consists of half lines that are metrically (metre) identical (isometric hemistichs). Persian metrics are based strictly on the quantity of syllables in which three values are distinguished: a short syllable, a long syllable, and an extended syllable (which is counted as a long syllable plus a short one). The individual metres allow only minor variations. In theory they are regarded as derivations of ideal patterns, but in practice each of the approximately 30 variations constitutes a separate metrical pattern. The best-known metre is the motaqāreb (Arabic: motaqārib), which was especially applied to epic poetry.

       rhyme is used in all kinds of Persian poetry, but its distribution provides one of the main distinctions for the poetic forms. A fundamental type is monorhyme—the repetition of the same rhyming sound at the end of each distich, with the exception of the first distich, in which the first hemistich also uses that same rhyme (such a poem would be represented by the rhyme scheme aabaca). On this principle are the qaṣīdeh (Arabic: qaṣīdah (qasida)) and the ghazal constructed, as are the stanzaic poems and partly also the Persian robāʿī, or quatrain, although the latter occurs in two different patterns of rhyme, aaba and aaaa. Another short form is the qiṭʿah, or muqaṭṭaʿah, called a “fragment” because the first hemistichs of such poems do not rhyme. The only form not conforming to the rule of monorhyme is the masnawi, or poem in couplets, in which each distich has a separate internal rhyme, which changes with each new distich (aabbcc and so on). A special feature of Persian rhyme is the radīf, a kind of refrain consisting of the same particle (a word or a short phrase) added after each instance of the rhyme throughout a poem.

      In Persian, different types of poetry are often associated with specific poetic forms, but not exclusively. In court poetry, for instance, the special form of the panegyric is the qaṣīdeh (qasida), its length varying between 15 and more than 100 distichs. The main part of the qaṣīdeh expresses extensive praise of the merits of the poet's patron by way of a conventional repertoire of topoi. The most attractive part of the poem is usually the nasīb, or introduction, which addresses topics such as love, nature, and wine. At the courts, panegyrical odes served a ceremonial purpose, with poets required to present them at festivals marking the New Year or at ʿĪd al-Fiṭr, the holiday that concludes Ramadan, the Muslim holy month of fasting. Other occasions for panegyrics were births and deaths, the foundation of buildings, military campaigns, or royal hunts. However, panegyrics could also take the form of stanzaic poems or dedicatory sections in epic poems. A qaṣīdeh could also be used by religious poets as a homiletic or didactic poem.

       ghazals are much shorter poems, usually no more than 7 to 10 distichs. They are known to have existed—as a type of oral poetry accompanied by music—long before the earliest written records in which they first appear. The first collections of ghazals handed down in divans date from the beginning of the 12th century. Very soon the ghazal developed into one of Persian literature's most important poetic forms. One of its unique features is the convention by which the poem is concluded by a passage of one of two distichs in which the name of the poet (usually a pen name) is mentioned. By origin the ghazal is a poem of love, but several subsidiary subjects became attached to this theme. Quite early the ghazal was adopted by mystics as a medium for the expression of love for the divine. The imagery of a ghazal lent itself easily to allegorization or at least to a type of ambiguity that pointed toward both secular and transcendental referents.

      The rhyme pattern of the masnawi, only rarely used in Arabic poetry, gave Persian poets scope for a rich and varied epic literature. A division of masnawis into categories of heroic, romantic, and didactic provides a convenient but rough classification. Narrative plays a role in each of these types, and didacticism is not quite absent from poems that aim first to tell a story.

      The qiṭʿa and the robāʿī are best suited for epigrams. These shorter forms were used for satire and topical poetry but also for mystical verse. They were frequently inserted in prose texts to highlight special points in a discursive or narrative context.

Court poetry
      The period when rulers of Iranian origin were in power was only a short interlude before the arrival of Turkish (Turkic peoples) tribes from Central Asia. At first the Turks were military slaves to the Muslims, but soon they established their own dynasties. The first were the Ghaznavids (Ghaznavid Dynasty), residing at Ghazna (now Ghaznī, Afg.), shortly followed by the Qarakhanids (Qarakhanid Dynasty) of Central Asia and by the Seljuqs (Seljuq), whose massive invasion in the middle of the 11th century also caused great demographic changes in the Islamic Middle East. For centuries the Turks remained the dominating political force in Iranian lands and in Anatolia, where they laid the foundation for modern Turkey. They underwent a process of Islamization that was profoundly influenced by Persian civilization. As a part of this process, the Seljuqs copied the courtly traditions of their Iranian predecessors, including the patronage of poetry, which was considered to be most valuable for building up the prestige of kingship in the Iranian style.

Early poets and the Shāh-nāmeh
      The first significant Persian poet was Rūdakī. He flourished in the 10th century, when the Sāmānids were at the height of their power. His reputation as a court poet and as an accomplished musician and singer has survived, although little of his poetry has been preserved. Among his lost works is a versified translation (probably from the Arabic) of the fables collected in Kalīlah wa Dimnah.

 Also during the 10th century, several attempts were made to produce a Persian version of the epic tradition that had already been incorporated into Arabic historiography. Daqīqī made one such attempt; he began a poetic version of which no more than a fragment—dealing with the establishment of Zoroastrianism—is still extant. This fragment survived as a result of Ferdowsī, the greatest epic poet of Persia, who included Daqīqī's lines in his Shāh-nāmeh (“Book of Kings”), an epic poem of approximately 50,000 distichs that he completed about 1010.

      The story told in the Shāh-nāmeh starts with Gayōmart, the first king but also the first man, and ends with the death of the last Sāsānian king at the time of the Arab invasion. It is a mixture of myth, legend, and history, some of which can be traced back to the Avesta and the Vedic literature of India (see Vedic religion). In the view of world history presented in the Shāh-nāmeh, Iran is at the centre of events, and Iranian kingship is presented as a universal institution. However, Iran's dominating position is also challenged: first by the Arab usurper Ẕaḥḥāk (a humanized dragon derived from ancient mythology) and then by the king of Tūrān, a rival empire situated in Central Asia. Behind these conflicts is the Zoroastrian idea that throughout the history of the world a divine element and a demonic element are fighting with each other until in the end good prevails over evil. In their struggle against Tūrān, the kings of Iran are supported by a number of vassal lords, in particular by a clan of local rulers, the family of Rostam, who is the main hero of Ferdowsī's poem. In the first section of the Shāh-nāmeh, which is entirely legendary, a number of long stories are included, the most famous of which is the tragic fight between Rostam and his son Sohrāb. It ends with the father's unwitting killing of his own son. The later parts of the poem come closer to the actual history of Iran: they deal with the campaigns of Alexander the Great and the lives of the Sāsānian kings, but here also many elements are clearly legendary. The Shāh-nāmeh quickly became of great importance to Iranians as the literary expression of their national sentiments.

The proliferation of court patronage
      In the first decades of the 11th century, Ghazna (Ghaznī) was the most important centre of Persian literature. This was the result of the cultural policy of the sultan Maḥmūd (reigned 998–1030), who assembled a circle of scholars, philosophers, and poets around his throne in support of his claim to royal status in Iran. The leading poet was ʿUnṣurī, whom the sultan appointed as his “lord of the poets” with the authority to test the talents of any poet seeking to be admitted to the sultan's court. ʿUnṣurī's qaṣīdehs were highly appreciated for their rhetorical virtuosity. He also wrote a number of romantic poems in masnawi form, which are almost completely lost now, except for some fragments from the love story of Vāmeq and ʿArāʾ (Arabic: Wāmiq and ʿAdhrāʾ), an adaptation of a long Greek narrative of the Hellenistic period. Other renowned poets of Maḥmūd's circle were Farrukhī, who excelled in attractive nasībs to his poems of praise, and Manūchihrī, a specialist in long stanzaic poems.

      The Ghaznavid poets glorified in their panegyrics the raids of the sultan's army into the Indian subcontinent. These campaigns resulted in a permanent conquest of the Punjab, where Lahore (now in Pakistan) became the residence of a Ghaznavid prince as the viceroy of Hindustan. In the second half of the 11th century, a tradition of court poetry was established in Lahore. The major representative was Masʿūd Saʿd Salmān. He was an official of the viceroy's administration, but he fell into disgrace and had to spend long years in exile in remote fortresses. He wrote several poems to bring his dismal condition to the attention of the Ghaznavid sultan and thereby established a genre of Persian prison poetry.

      In the 11th and 12th centuries other Turkish rulers continued the tradition of patronage established by the Ghaznavids. The most important court was that of the Great Seljuq sultans, who resided first at Eṣfahān (now in Iran) and then at Merv in Khorāsān (near modern Mary, Turkm.). The prominent masters of the panegyric qaṣīdeh were Muʿizzī and Anvarī, who both flourished in the first half of the 12th century. The latter is particularly famous for his renewal of panegyric poetry through the introduction of learned allusions and sophisticated rhetorical devices. In modern Iranian criticism these features are seen as the first signs of a change from the comparatively simple and natural idiom of the early poets, called the “style of Khorāsān,” to the much more sophisticated “style of Iraq” (i.e., “Persian Iraq” [ʿIrāq ʿajamī], a name once used for central and western Iran). These geographical terms refer to a westward shift by Iran's literary centres, which gained momentum in the course of the 12th century when the Seljuq empire began to fall apart. Small states emerged in all parts of the country, usually under the rule of atabegs, the governors of young princes of the Seljuq house who had seized power on their own behalf. Persian poetry benefited greatly from this political process because the centres of literary patronage proliferated.

      Already by the mid-11th century the tradition of Persian poetry had been introduced in the region of Azerbaijan (today in northwestern Iran) by Asadī, who had migrated to Azerbaijan from his native town of Ṭūs (now Mashhad) in Khorāsān. As a poet, he had become the most important successor to Ferdowsī through his Garshāsp-nāmeh, a heroic epic in masnawi form telling about the adventures in India and Sri Lanka of Garshāsp, a supposed ancestor of Rostam's. Asadī was also the author of Lughat-i furs (“Vocabulary of the Persians”), which explained words used by the poets in eastern Iran and intended to promote Persian poetry in the west.

      About the middle of the 12th century two outstanding poets emerged under the patronage of local rulers in western Iran. At the court of Shīrvān, Khāqānī wrote qaṣīdehs exploiting the possibilities of imagery and such figures of speech as simile and metaphor in a very personal style. Although he stayed within the conventions of court poetry, he also followed the trend toward the treatment of ethical and religious themes that was gaining strength in his days. His most famous poem is the qaṣīdeh Aywā-e Madāʾin (“The Portico of Madāʾin”), an evocation of the palace of the Sāsānians on the banks of the Tigris in what is today Iraq. It was intended as a reminder of the vanity of worldly power and glory. The masnawi titled Tuḥfat al-Irāqayn (“The Present from the Two Iraqs”), written on the occasion of a pilgrimage to Mecca, cleverly knits together panegyric, admonition, and allegory.

      The second outstanding poet to emerge in western Iran during the 12th century was Neẓāmī, who displayed in his poetic style a mannerism similar to Khāqānī's. But the genre in which Neẓāmī excelled made his works more accessible. His great fame rests on a group of masnawis known collectively as the Khamseh (“The Quintuplet,” or “The Five”; they are in fact individual works that only later were treated as a set of poems). The first, Makhzan al-asrār (The Treasury of Mysteries), is a didactic poem; the other four are usually classified as romantic masnawis, though they also contain elements that belong to the heroic epic. (Love stories had already been incorporated into the Shāh-nāmeh and appeared as a separate genre in the works of earlier poets, in particular in the adaptation of an ancient Iranian tale in Vīs wa Rāmīn [“Vīs and Rāmīn”] by Fakhr al-Dīn Gurgānī, written about 1050.) Two of Neẓāmī's poems are tales about Sāsānian kings who were historical figures: Khosrow wa Shīrīn (“Khosrow and Shīrīn”) tells the story of the love of Khosrow II (reigned 590–628) for an Armenian princess, and in Haft paykar (“The Seven Beauties”) the life of Bahrām V (reigned 420–438) serves as a framework for seven fairy tales narrated to the king each night when he visits one of the pavilions of his seven brides, who are all princesses from one of the seven climes identified by medieval cosmology. Astrological associations involving planets, precious stones, and colours are woven into the poem. For the masnawi Laylī wa Majnun (“Layla and Majnun”) Neẓāmī found his material in poems attributed to the 6th-century Arab poet Imruʾ al-Qays that are embedded in anecdotes about his love for a Bedouin girl belonging to another tribe. Neẓāmī made these separate tales into a continuous romance treating all aspects of a love affair that cannot find its fulfillment in this world. The last poem is the Iskandar-nāmeh (“Book of Alexander the Great”), which consists of two parts: the first deals with Alexander's military campaigns, and the second contains his conversations with the sages and philosophers assembled at his court. Neẓāmī's poem is based on Ferdowsī's treatment of the same story, but Neẓāmī's ultimate source is a Greek-language romance written in Egypt before 300 CE (see Alexander romance). The Khamseh became a model that later poets emulated. The most successful imitations were the romances composed in the 14th century by Amīr Khosrow, who was a poet and mystic as well as a courtier of the sultans of Delhi, and in the 15th century by Jāmī.

The qiṭʿa and the robāʿī
      Collections of qiṭʿas (fragments) and robāīyāt (robāʿī) (quatrains) are to be found in almost all the divans of the court poets. These short poems were the small coinage of literary communication, used for the exchange of repartees in a conversation between a poet and his patron or among poets and courtiers. Often these poems were improvisations that were later written down because the wittiness displayed in them was highly appreciated.

      Their contents could be of all kinds. Qiṭʿas were used for topical poems, satires, and light verse, the comic force of which lay often in their use of coarse language and perceived obscenity. Separate from the divans, robāīyāt were assembled in anthologies. They provide glimpses into literature written outside the courts.

      Many epigrams were also handed down as poems composed by famous philosophers, scholars, and mystics, but usually the philological evidence is too uncertain to confirm such attributions. The most celebrated case is that of Omar Khayyam, a mathematician and astronomer of great renown who was credited with the authorship of robāīyāt expressing a skeptical view of the world and advocating hedonism as the sole comfort in a life without meaning. Within a few centuries after his death, in 1131, the number of robāīyāt ascribed to Omar grew to more than 1,000. After the English writer Edward FitzGerald (FitzGerald, Edward) translated Omar's poetry as The Rubáiyát of Omar Khayyám (1859), Omar became to Western readers the greatest Persian poet. Mahsatī, a female poet to whom are attributed robāīyāt of a secular and occasionally bawdy kind, would have lived about the same time as Omar. But it is doubtful whether she was a historical figure, because she also appears as the heroine of a romantic story that contains many of the poems put to her name.

Religious poetry
      The most important environments outside the courts where Persian literature could thrive were those provided by religious minorities and mystical circles. In the 10th century the Ismāʿīlī (Ismāʿīlīte) branch of Shīʿism (Shīʿite) had come into power in Egypt and established the Fāṭimid Dynasty. From Cairo intensive propaganda was targeted at the Sunni ʿAbbāsid caliphs of Baghdad. In the Sāmānid period, Ismāʿīlī missionaries gained a considerable influence over the intellectual elite of the eastern Iranian provinces, taking advantage of the new opportunities offered to them by the rebirth of Persian as a written language. Later, under the Ghaznavids, who strongly supported Sunni Islam, a reaction set in, and the minority groups of Ismāʿīlīs were persecuted. Nāṣir-i Khusraw, a Ghaznavid official who in 1045 went on a pilgrimage to Mecca, visited Cairo and was there converted to the Ismāʿīlī cause. After his return he sought refuge in the mountainous region of Badakhshān (today divided between Afghanistan and Tajikistan). While in hiding he wrote expositions of the tenets of Ismāʿīlism in Persian prose. His most famous work is Safar-nāmeh (“Book of Travel”; Eng. trans. Diary of a Journey Through Syria and Palestine), a travelogue of his journey to Arabia and Egypt. In long qaṣīdehs and in a masnawi, the Rawshanāʾī-nāmeh (“Book of Light”), he set forth his ethical teachings. This didactic poetry influenced Sufi (Islamic mystical) poetry.

      Probably the first Persian poems written by mystics were robāīyāt. An extensive collection of these poems is attributed to Abū Saʿīd ibn Abū al-Khayr, who died in 1049. He would be the first mystical poet in Persian literature, but one of his hagiographers asserts that he did not write any poetry himself; he instead merely used anonymous quatrains in his preaching that were circulating among the Sufis of Khorāsān. Another eponym linked to a set of robāīyāt is Bābā Ṭāhir. He is a historically vague personality thought to have lived during the 11th century as a wandering dervish in the mountains of western Iran. These poems are written in a nonclassical Persian that includes many colloquialisms.

      Much more is known about the 12th-century poet Sanāʾī. He began his career as a poet at the court of Ghazna but turned his back on professional poetry, seeking instead the patronage of preachers and mystics for whom he wrote poems in all the poetic forms available to secular literature of his time. His major work is Ḥadīqat al-ḥaqīqah wa sharīʿat al-ṭarīqah (“The Garden of Truth and the Law of the Path”; Eng. trans. in part The Walled Garden of Truth, or The Enclosed Garden of Truth), a lengthy didactic poem in masnawi form written as a sermon, which ends with a moralizing address to the Ghaznavid sultan. A remarkable work is Sayr al-ʿibād ilā al-maʿād (“The Journey of the Servants to the Place of Return”), a short masnawi that describes in allegories the stages passed by the soul on its way through life, from a fetus to a fully developed human being. In addition to writing didactic qaṣīdehs, which resemble those of Nāṣir-i Khusraw, Sanāʾī was the first Persian poet who left a sizable collection of ghazals. In these poems the blending of the secular and the transcendental, which later became characteristic of this genre, can be seen. An important motif introduced by Sanāʾī is the idealization of the qalandar, a type of outlaw who defies all rules of good behaviour and abandons himself to drunkenness and debauchery. The term was adopted by dervishes who practiced a nonconformist way of life that rejected not only the world but also conventional piety, which they decried as hypocrisy. The qalandar acquired a strong symbolic value as a motif in Sufi poetry, especially in ghazals.

      Even more detached from secular poetry was Farīd al-Dīn ʿAṭṭār (Aṭṭār, Farīd al-Dīnʿ). He was born in Nīshāpūr, Iran, and was perhaps an apothecary, as his name ʿAṭṭār—literally, “perfumer” or “apothecary”—implies. No ties of patronage are known in his case, nor are his connections to the Sufi communities existing in his time very clear. His output in poetry and prose is, however, considerable, although a number of the works carrying his name are forgeries made after his death. Among his genuine works is a group of didactic masnawis in which narrative plays an important role. In most of these poems ʿAṭṭār used the device of a frame story, the most famous example of which is the tale in Manṭiq al-ṭayr (“The Speech of the Birds”; Eng. trans. The Conference of the Birds); in it birds search for a king, whom after a perilous journey they find in the mythical bird Sīmurgh. That name, according to a popular etymology, means “Thirty Birds,” a reference to the 30 birds that survive the quest and attain their goal, which amounts to finding themselves in the Sīmurgh. Within these frame stories ʿAṭṭār employs a wealth of anecdotes to illustrate the details of his discourse. He also left a divan with mystical ghazals and didactic qaṣīdehs. His numerous robāīyāt were collected in the Mukhtār-nāmeh (“Book of Selection”).

      The third major mystical poet was Jalāl al-Dīn Rūmī (Rūmī), also known as Mawlānā. Born in the city of Balkh (now in Afghanistan), he traveled westward at an early age with his family to settle at Konya, the residence of the Seljuq rulers of Rūm (Anatolia). A religious teacher, he became the spiritual head of a community of students that gradually developed into a circle of mystics who cultivated ritual based on poetry, music, and dance. Rūmī's mysticism was intensified through his acquaintance with the dervish Shams al-Dīn of Tabrīz, in whom he recognized a manifestation of transcendental beauty. Even after Shams's disappearance, Rūmī identified with him to such an extent that he signed most of his more than 3,000 ghazals with Shams's name. Rūmī also wrote a didactic masnawi in six volumes known as the Manavī-yi maʿnavī (“The Spiritual Masnawi,” or “The Spiritual Couplets”). This poem, undoubtedly the masterpiece of Persian mystical poetry, combines the stylistic influences of both Sanāʾī and ʿAṭṭār. After Rūmī's death, his circle was institutionalized as the Mawlawiyyah (Mawlawīyah) order of Sufis, also known as the Mevlevis and often identified in the West as the “whirling dervishes.” They became one of the great mystical organizations in the Ottoman Empire.

Classical prose
      In the classical tradition the concept of "literature" was almost synonymous with poetry. Prose was used for utilitarian purposes, particularly in scholarship, religion, and the affairs of government. In all these domains the Persian language was in competition with the more prestigious Arabic. In theology, science, and literary scholarship, Persian works were mostly popularized versions of more sophisticated works in Arabic, but this does not always mean that the former are of lesser interest. The Kīmiya-yi saʿādat (after 1096; The Alchemy of Happiness) by the theologian and mystic al-Ghazālī (Ghazālī, al-), for instance, is one such work: it is a condensed version of the author's own work in Arabic on Islamic ethics, the Iḥyāʾ ʿulūm al-dīn (The Revival of Religious Sciences). Written in a lively conversational Persian, Kīmiya-yi saʿādat offers a coherent overview of Muslim ethics in an accessible form. Much later, during the 17th century, Muḥammad Bāqir Majlisī wrote a series of books in Persian on the popular beliefs of Iranian Shīʿites; these books were also composed to parallel his learned works in Arabic.

      Persian prose contains a treasure of narratives. In books belonging to the mirror for princes genre, for instance, the demonstration of proper political practice by means of anecdotes was usually more important than theoretical expositions. Their authors were mostly officials and courtiers, such as the great 11th-century statesman Niẓām al-Mulk, who wrote his Siyāsat-nāmeh (The Book of Government) for the Seljuq sultan, and ʿUnṣur al-Maʿālī Kay Kāʾūs, an 11th-century prince of a deposed dynasty serving the Ghaznavids, who wrote the Qābūs-nāmeh (“The Book of Qābūs”). The Chahār maqāleh (“Four Discourses”) by Niẓāmī ʿArūẕī focuses not on the ruler himself but on four important functionaries at court: the secretary, the poet, the doctor, and the astrologer. Fables could be equally useful in illustrating maxims of the ethics of kingship. A 12th-century Persian adaptation of the Kalīlah wa Dimnah by Naṣr Allāh Munshī as well as other texts based on frame stories and borrowed from India, such as the Sindbad-nāmeh (“Book of Sindbad”; see Seven Wise Masters) and the Bakhtiyār-nāmeh (“Book of Bakhtiyār”), represent a branch of the same genre. Another Persian prose genre is the chivalrous novel; Dārāb-nāmeh (“Book of Dārāb”) by Abū Ṭāhir Ṭarsūsī and Kitāb-i Samak-i ʿAyyār (“Book of Samak the Knight-Errant”) by Farāmurz Khudādād ibn ʿAbd ʿAllāh Kātib al-Arrajānī were written in the 12th century in a simple style and served as a continuation of the heroic epic on a more popular level.

      Most writers of these works were members of the state bureaucracy. From the 12th century onward, their flowery style became a model of prestigious Persian prose, not only in official compositions but also in other genres. This manner of writing was characterized by an excessive use of learned Arabic words and redundant phrases, and it was given a poetic tone by the introduction of rhymed prose (sajʿ) and the insertion of lines of verse. This stilted style was noticeable especially in historiography, which produced an abundance of works beginning in the Mongol period (see below The Mongol and Timurid period (Persian literature)). There is a marked difference between the bombastic style of these later historians and the direct but elegant prose of Bayhaqī, an 11th-century official of the Ghaznavids, whose work became a model even to modern Persian writers.

      The mystics of Persia left a particularly rich heritage of prose writings that is not less important than their achievements in poetry. Moreover, they created works across a great variety of prose genres, several of which were unknown in Arabic literature. These include volumes of letters to adepts, collections of conversations by important sheikhs, mystical commentaries on the Qurʾān, and treatises on Sufi (Ṣūfism) topics. Especially remarkable are works on the theory of love composed in an epigrammatic style. The oldest and most celebrated example is the 12th-century Sawāniḥ ("Flashes [of the Mind]"), an essay on the psychology of mystical and secular love by Aḥmad al-Ghazālī (a brother of the theologian al-Ghazālī), whose subtle, epigrammatical style was imitated in the 15th century by Jāmī in his Lawaʾiḥ ("Flashes [of Light]"), a treatise on Sufism. Suhrawardī, a highly original 12th-century thinker in the traditions of both Aristotelian philosophy and Islamic mysticism, wrote a number of short allegorical texts in Persian prose. Many Sufi hagiographies describe either the life of a single mystical master or, as the collections assembled by ʿAṭṭār (in Tadhkirat al-awliyāʾ [“Memoirs of the Saints”]) and Jāmī (in Nafaḥāt al-uns [“Breezes of Intimacy”]) do, the tradition of Sufism as a whole.

      A very successful form of Persian prose, the tadhkirah, was an amalgam of biography and anthology. The oldest work of this kind still extant is ʿAwfī's 13th-century Lubāb al-albāb (“The Quintessence of the Hearts”). In the late 15th century Dawlatshāh composed his Tadhkirat al-shuʿarāʾ ("Memoirs of the Poets"), from which title was derived the appellation for this genre of poetical biography. It flourished until the 19th century in all countries where Persian letters were cultivated. The tadhkirahs constitute a rich, though not always reliable, source of knowledge about the lives of the Persian poets.

      After the emergence of Persian literature, the most important works on literary theory continued to be written in Arabic, though not seldom the authors were Iranians. The influence of Arabic terminology, ideas, and descriptive conventions remained very strong until the 20th century. The most comprehensive textbook of Persian poetics was composed by Shams-i Qays (Shams al-Dīn Muḥammad ibn Qays Rāzī) in the 1220s.

The Mongol and Timurid period
      About 1220 the Mongols, led by Chinggis Khan (Genghis Khan), devastated Iran, especially in the east, where they destroyed several cities. Thirty years later a Mongol state was established in Iran by Chinggis Khan's grandson Hülegü. Before the end of the 13th century, the Īl-Khans, as the new rulers were called (see Il-Khanid Dynasty), had become Muslims and had assimilated Persian civilization, mainly as a result of their officials, most of whom were Iranians. Tabrīz, the capital of the Mongols, became a cultural centre where old traditions were safeguarded but innovations were also attempted. An important development during this period was the opening of contacts with China, which had also been incorporated into the Mongol empire. Chinese artists came to Tabrīz and contributed significantly to the development of miniature painting as a major artistic tradition in Iran. The works most frequently illustrated were Ferdowsī's Shāh-nāmeh and Neẓāmī's Khamseh.

      At the same time, the Mongols' Iranian officials developed Persian historiography. An important achievement was the Jāmiʿ al-tawārīkh ("The Collection of Chronicles"), written by Rashīd al-Dīn (Rashīd ad-Dīn), who became a vizier of the Īl-Khans in 1298. This is a general history not only of Islam but also of other civilizations known to the author.

Saʿdī and Ḥāfeẓ
      The rule of the Mongols in Iran came to an end in 1335. Timur, in a series of destructive campaigns, attempted later in the 14th century to restore their empire. His efforts produced a unified state that did not last long, and in the 15th century political power in the region again became fragmented. The descendants of Timur, known as the Timurids (Timurid Dynasty), resided mainly in Samarkand (now in Uzbekistan) and Herāt (now in Afghanistan) and from there exerted control over Iran's eastern regions, while other rulers reigned over the remaining parts of Iran. This situation favoured the flowering of literature and the arts. One of the provincial cities in Iran that became important as a cultural centre was Shīrāz in the southern province of Fārs. Writers, poets, and painters were able to find shelter with the local dynasties there; these dynasties had, in fact, been offering protection since the Mongol raids of the 13th century.

 About 1258, the year Hülegü's hordes sacked Baghdad and murdered the last ʿAbbāsid caliph, the poet Saʿdī returned to his native Shīrāz after a series of long journeys through the Middle East. As a present to the city, he claimed, he brought with him the masnawi Būstān (The Orchard), the most brilliant specimen of Persian didactic poetry. Directly afterward he wrote, in prose, the Gulistān (The Rose Garden), which treated the same moralistic themes as in The Orchard but in a more playful manner. With the latter work Saʿdī won his reputation as one of the greatest Persian writers not only in the Middle East but also in Europe, where the The Rose Garden was introduced as early as the 17th century. To Iranians he is moreover a master of the ghazal; indeed, it is often claimed that he established the classical form of the Persian ghazal. Numerous lines from his poetry and the The Rose Garden have become proverbs in Persian. One of the first to follow Saʿdī's lyrical style was Amīr Khosrow, through whom Persian poetry became established on the Indian subcontinent.

 With the 14th-century poet Ḥāfeẓ, who wrote hardly any other poems than ghazals, the development of this genre reached its zenith. Although he was undoubtedly dependent on the work of older poets, Ḥāfeẓ succeeded in combining the elements handed down to him by tradition in a strikingly new manner. The most remarkable features of his ghazals are the kaleidoscopic shifts of imagery and motives within a single poem. It often seems as if the individual lines stand largely on their own, and the internal unity of the ghazals and their themes are difficult to determine. This has given rise to many variant readings, including different line ordering, that exist even in the oldest manuscripts of his divan. Modern Western critics have tried to identify rules that govern the internal coherence of a typical ghazal by Ḥāfeẓ.

      Another question often raised is whether Ḥāfeẓ's poems speak of mystical or of earthly love. In the past the former position was taken by most commentators in the Middle East, although modern literary scholars in Iran have pointed to Ḥāfeẓ's undeniable ties with the court of Shīrāz and have emphasized the secular aspects of his art. Both interpretative possibilities have their supporters among Western critics. Ḥāfeẓ's frequent references to behaviour that includes indulgence in wine drinking and flirtation with young cupbearers are sometimes taken as a direct reflection of his participation in the conviviality of the court of Shīrāz. There is also a streak of sharp sarcasm in his poetry that is aimed at the representatives of respectable religious life; not only are pious scholars, Islamic judges, preachers, and the guardians of public morality his targets, but so too are the ascetic Sufis. The persona of the antinomian qalandar, who figured two centuries earlier in the ghazals of Sanāʾī, appears again in the poems of Ḥāfeẓ, usually under the appellation of rind. The poet's own attitudes are subsumed by the abstract term rindī (“vagabondry”); some have ascribed to Ḥāfeẓ the stance of a rebel to the social order. However, because antinomianism was also a prominent strain in medieval Persian mysticism, an alternative reading of these motives—as the expression of a total rejection of worldly values—cannot be excluded.

Jāmī
      After Ḥāfeẓ the ghazal continued to be the most important form of lyric poetry in Persian. In histories of Persian literature, the 15th century is usually described as a period of little originality. Poets strove for rhetorical virtuosity instead of inventiveness, especially in their handling of the ghazal. The stories told in masnawi verse or in prose were mostly allegories, of which a poem by Fattāḥī, which relates the adventures of Ḥusn (“Beauty”) and Dil (“Heart”), provides a good example. However, this century produced one really great poet: Jāmī, a sheikh of the Naqshbandiyyah, a powerful Sufi order, who was a close friend of the Timurid sultan of Herāt. Jāmī was a prolific poet well aware of the great tradition that lay behind him. He assembled his many ghazals in three divans at different stages of his life. As a writer of masnawis, he extended the repertoire of Neẓāmī's Khamseh to a set of seven poems, under the title Haft awrang (“The Seven Thrones,” or “The Constellation of the Great Bear”; both names are references to the constellation Ursa Major). Jāmī added not only more didactic poems but also new subjects: the tale of the love between Yūsuf and Zulaykhā (the biblical wife of Potiphar), based on the story as it is told in sura 12 of the Qurʾān, and Salmān and Absāl, derived from Greek sources. In both works the allegorical meanings to be read into the stories are made explicit by the poet.

The Ṣafavids and the introduction of Shīʿism
      About 1500 the history of Iran took a new turn that had great consequences both politically and culturally. It was then that the Ṣafavids (Ṣafavid Dynasty) were able to found a unified state in Iran. They also introduced the beliefs of the Ithnā ʿAsharīyyah (Ithnā ʿAsharīyah) sect of Shīʿite Islam as a national religion that replaced the predominantly Sunni Islam to which most Iranians had adhered since the time of the Arab conquest. Initially, the Ṣafavid shahs continued the tradition of artistic patronage established by previous dynasties. Architecture and miniature painting flourished as never before. In literature the conventions of court poetry lived on, but no great works were produced.

      The only poet whose name could be mentioned next to the older masters is Ṣāʾib of Tabrīz, who specialized in writing ghazals during the 17th century. At the beginning of his career, Ṣāʾib had spent some years at Indian courts. By the time he had returned to Iran and settled in Eṣfahān, his poetry showed the influence of new tendencies referred to as the “Indian style.” The most important of this style's features was a much freer use of imagery: poets such as Ṣāʾib disregarded the rule of “harmony of images” that had always been kept in Persian poetry, a rule that decreed that the poet should never bring together images belonging to incompatible spheres and that, within the context of one or more lines, the poet should use only those images accepted as harmonious by tradition. Actually, this style had first appeared in Iran about the end of the 15th century, the ghazal poet Bābā Fighānī being often mentioned as an early exemplar, but it became much more pronounced in Persian poetry written in India. From the late 16th century onward many poets left Iran, disappointed by the lack of patronage under the Ṣafavids, to try their fortune at the Indian courts. A largely independent Indo-Persian tradition came into being that survived into modern times. The Indian style in its most extreme form is exemplified by the poetry of Bīdil, but even later the Indo-Persian tradition produced such major 19th- and 20th-century figures as Mīrzā Asadullāh Khān Ghālib (Ghālib, Mīrzā Asadullāh Khān) and Sir Muḥammad Iqbāl (Iqbāl, Sir Muḥammad).

      In Iran a reaction to the loosening of stylistic norms came about in the later half of the 18th century. Standards of good poetry were sought in the works of the earliest poets who had practiced the unadulterated style of Khorāsān. A neoclassical ideal of poetry continued to dominate Persian literature until the 20th century.

      After the introduction of Shīʿism in Iran under the Ṣafavids, writers and poets turned their attention increasingly to Shīʿite topics. The central subject was the martyrdom of the 12 imams—the descendants of the Prophet Muhammad and the leaders of the Shīʿite community after the Prophet's death—and in particular the death of the third imam, al-Ḥusayn ibn ʿAlī (Ḥusayn ibn ʿAlī, al-), who in 680 was killed at the Battle of Karbalāʾ (Karbalāʾ, Battle of) in what is today Iraq. This event was evoked in a poem of 12 stanzas written during the 16th century by Muḥtasham. For generations this poem has been used in commemorations of Ḥusayn's death. The ritual function, so important to Shīʿite literature, gave birth to the only form of drama known in the Persian classical tradition: the taʿziyyah, a word that originally meant “consolation” and was applied to various forms of religious mourning. Since the 19th century the word taʿziyyah has referred in particular to passion plays performed by lay actors enacting the sufferings of the 12 Shīʿite imams. The plays mainly centre on the fate of the holy martyrs at the Battle of Karbalāʾ, which was of fundamental significance to the concept of Shīʿite martyrdom. The performance of taʿziyyahs reached its height in the period of the Qājār Dynasty (1796–1925), but the plays experienced a revival at the turn of the 21st century.

Modern Iran
      In the early decades of the 19th century, contacts between Iran and Europe rapidly increased, while two wars with Russia (1804–13 and 1826–28) made apparent Iran's military weakness. Among enlightened members of the Qājār elite the necessity of reforms was deeply felt. This led to the first attempts at a modernization of Iranian society. These efforts were aimed primarily at strengthening the army through better training and equipment and through the assistance of foreign advisers. In general, these reforms sought to implement technical improvements.

      Measures were also taken that concerned the areas of education and culture. One of them was the reintroduction and increasingly widespread use of the printing press in Iran, which had been without a press since the 17th century. In order to improve the efficiency of government and the spread of information, an attempt was made to simplify the written language as it was used by officials and historians. Young men were sent abroad to study at European universities. They came home not only with new scientific and technical skills but also with a knowledge of Western languages and literatures. About 1850 the Dār al-Fonūn (Polytechnic School) was founded at Tehrān; it was the first modern academic institution in Iran.

      In the later 19th century, genres hitherto unknown to classical literature were introduced by the playwrights Mirza Jaʿfar Qarachaʿdaghi and Mirza Aqa Tabrizi and the novelists Abd al-Rahim Talibuf and Zayn al-ʿAbedin. Their criticism of political and social conditions helped to prepare the minds of intellectuals for political changes. In the first decade of the 20th century this developed into a revolutionary mood that burst out in an uprising against the authoritarian rule of the Qājār shahs that became known as the Constitutional Revolution. In 1906 a constitution and a parliament (the Majles) were instituted in Iran. Poets severed their ties to the ancient tradition of patronage and joined in the struggle as independent engagé writers. ʿAref Qazvini and Muḥammad Taqī Bahār (Bahār, Muḥammad Taqī) were among those who left the courts and addressed themselves directly to the Iranian people in revolt. A new political press opened its columns to writers and poets of revolutionary texts. ʿAli Akbar Dekhoda was an influential satirist of daily events and made a contribution to the modernization of Persian prose.

      Under the rule (1925–41) of Reza Shah Pahlavi, the freedom of expression previously won was cut short, although the modernizing policies of the regime were indirectly helpful in creating the conditions for the emergence of a new Persian literature. Nima Yushij was the first to propose a radical renewal of Persian poetry, not only of its contents but also of its prosody and imagery, but he found the opposing forces of tradition to be very strong. His earliest poems, influenced by French Romanticism and Symbolism, appeared in the 1920s. But it was not until the 1940s that his ideas were adopted by a young generation of poets who went on to create a “new poetry” (shiʿr-i now) in Iran. Leading modernizers were Ahmad Shamlu, Forough Farrokhzad, Mehdi Akhvan-e Sales, and Nader Naderpour. They represented different directions of modernization, and they distanced themselves from the classical tradition in various ways. A special place was occupied by Sohrab Sepehri, whose mystical evocations of nature are much beloved by Iranian readers. By about 1960 this revolution in Persian poetics had won the field, and the new style had become firmly established. In spite of their preoccupation with a search for contemporary forms of poetic expression, poets of the 20th century did not stand aloof from the great issues in Iran's modern history. Many poets suffered censorship, imprisonment, and exile, both before and after Iran's Islamic revolution of 1978–79.

      Modern prose owes much to the small volume of short stories Yakī būd, yakī nabūd (Once Upon a Time), published in 1921 by Mohammed Ali Jamalzadeh (Jamalzadah, Muhammad ʿAli). These stories became a landmark in the development of realistic prose narrative, which had no precedent in the Persian tradition. Sadeq Hedayat (Hedayat, Sadeq) followed in the footsteps of Jamalzadeh by using the short story to portray the conventional lives of common people as well the confusions of modern intellectuals. To the latter subject he applied the devices of surrealistic writing in the short novel Būf-e kūr (1937; The Blind Owl), which found international recognition and was translated in many languages. Bozorg Alavi (Alavi, Bozorg) wrote stories and novels dealing with, on the one hand, the deeper causes of psychological problems and, on the other, the experiences of leftist intellectuals in their struggle. His novel Chashmhāyash (1952; Her Eyes), for instance, recounts a personal tragedy within a group of political activists.

      After Reza Shah's fall in 1941, when for a short time there was greater freedom of the press in Iran, another generation of prose writers emerged, the most prominent representatives of which were Sadeq Chubak (Chubak, Sadeq), a clever writer whose short stories show the influence of the American novelist Ernest Hemingway, and Jalal Al-e Ahmad, whose long essay Gharbzadegī (1962; “Westoxication”) became widely influential as an indictment of the slavish imitation of the West in Iranian society under the Pahlavi regime. Simin Daneshvar, his wife, had much success with her novel Savūshūn (1969; “The Sacrifice”; Eng. trans. A Persian Requiem, or Savushun), which describes the disruption of traditional society by foreign occupation during World War II. Among prose writers of the later 20th century, the influence of modern narrative techniques, inspired by Western writers such as James Joyce and William Faulkner, was strong, particularly in the works of Hushang Golshiri. His depiction of the decay of the ancient Iranian aristocracy in Shāzdeh Eḥtejāb (1968; “Prince Iḥtijāb”; Eng. trans. The Prince), a short novel that was also made into a film, is one of many instances of the symbiosis of literature and the visual and performing arts in modern Persian literature. A symbiosis of the arts also marks the work of Ghulam Husayn Saʿidi (Gholam-Hossein Saʿedi), who wrote short stories as well as plays for the theatre and scripts for successful Iranian films.

      The participation of women writers in modern literature increased considerably during the second half of the 20th century. Best known outside Iran is Shahrnoush Parsipour's novella Zanān bidūn-i mardān (1978; Women Without Men), which recounts the attempts of five women to overcome the limitations put upon their lives by male dominance in a traditional society. Like many other contemporary Iranian writers, Parsipour uses the narrative technique of magic realism in imitation of such Latin American authors as Gabriel García Márquez. In contrast to the late-20th-century tendency by writers to apply modern narrative techniques to their novels stands the social realism of Mahmoud Dawlatabadi. His great novel Kalīdar, published in 10 parts (1978–84), depicts the lives of nomads in the plains of Khorāsān, the author's native region.

      Poetry remained a prominent form of literature in Iran through the early 21st century. Following various international trends in poetic expression, many different schools of poetry further developed the modernist principles introduced by Nima Yushij. Of the great classical poets, Omar Khayyam and Ḥāfeẓ in particular survived as respected figures from the past who are today still considered to be relevant to modern poets. The Islamic Republic of Iran, applying criteria of political, religious, and moral correctness, placed severe limits on the free expression of writers and poets, although there were brief periods when government censorship was relaxed. From the 1980s onward, a substantial Persian emigré literature emerged in the United States and Europe.

J.T.P. de Bruijn

Additional Reading
Edward G. Browne, A Literary History of Persia, 4 vol. (1902–24, reissued 1999), although obsolescent, still provides a very readable introduction to Persian literature and includes many texts in translation. Ehsan Yarshater (ed.), Encyclopaedia Iranica (1982– ), is the most important reference work for Persian literature. A.J. Arberry, Classical Persian Literature (1958, reissued 1994), covers the “golden period” from the 9th to the end of the 15th century and to some extent updates Browne's monumental work. Jan Rypka, History of Iranian Literature, ed. by Karl Jahn (1968; originally published in Czech, 1956), authoritatively surveys modern literary scholarship in Iran, the West, and eastern Europe and includes chapters on the ancient and modern literatures of Iran, the Indian subcontinent, and Central Asia, but it provides no original texts. Ehsan Yarshater (ed.), Persian Literature (1988), is a volume of essays by several authors on aspects of classical and modern Persian literature.The prosody of classical poetry is treated in L.P. Elwell-Sutton, The Persian Metres (1976); and Finn Thiesen, A Manual of Persian Prosody (1982). Annemarie Schimmel, A Two-Colored Brocade (1992; originally published in German, 1984), examines imagery in Persian poetry. Other studies of Persian poetry are Julie Scott Meisami, Medieval Persian Court Poetry (1987); and J.T.P. de Bruijn, Persian Sufi Poetry (1997). Julie Scott Meisami, Persian Historiography to the End of the Twelfth Century (1999), surveys early historical writing in Persian.Edward G. Browne, The Press and Poetry of Modern Persia (1914, reprinted 1983), gives a firsthand account of literary events during the Constitutional Revolution of 1906. H. Kamshad, Modern Persian Prose Literature (1966, reissued 1996), focuses especially on the work of Sadeq Hedayat. Ahmad Karimi-Hakkak, Recasting Persian Poetry: Scenarios of Poetic Modernity in Iran (1995), studies the change of poetical paradigm that took place in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. Aspects of modern poetry and prose are investigated in M.R. Ghanoonparvar, Prophets of Doom: Literature as a Socio-Political Phenomenon in Modern Iran (1984), and In a Persian Mirror: Images of the West and Westerners in Iranian Fiction (1993).J.T.P. de Bruijn

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