Arabs and the art of storytelling : a strange familiarity /
Abdelfattah Kilito ; Translated by Mbarek Sryfi and Eric Sellin ; with a foreword by Roger Allen.
- First edition.
- xv, 152 pages ; 23 cm.
- Middle East literature in translation .
- Middle East literature in translation. .
Includes bibliographical references (pages 147-152) and index.
The prophetic pattern -- How should we read Kalila and Dimna? -- Speaking to the prince -- This verdant paradise -- The exemplary intruder: Hayy ibn Yaqzān -- The hostile eye -- Al-Muʻtamid's dahr -- The singing of the Jinns -- Portrait of the miser as a hero -- To lie once a year -- Is a thousand and one nights a boring book? -- The new Dante -- Perec and al-Harīrī -- Twenty-four hours in the life of Averroës.
In Arabs and the Art of Storytelling, the eminent Moroccan literary historian and critic Kilito revisits and reassesses, in a modern critical light, many traditional narratives of the Arab world. He brings to such celebrated texts as A Thousand and One Nights, Kalila and Dimna, and Kitab al-Bukhala' refreshing and iconoclastic insight, giving new life to classic stories that are often treated as fossilized and untouchable cultural treasures. For Arab scholars and readers, poetry has for centuries taken precedence, overshadowing narrative as a significant literary genre. Here, Kilito demonstrates the key role narrative has played in the development of Arab belles lettres and moral philosophy. His urbane style has earned him a devoted following among specialists and general readers alike, making this translation aninvaluable contribution to an English-speaking audience.