Three Mughal Poets: Mir, Sauda, Mir Hasan

Price: 495.00 INR

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ISBN:

9780195633917

Publication date:

01/07/1998

Paperback

304 pages

216x140mm

Price: 495.00 INR

We sell our titles through other companies
Disclaimer :You will be redirected to a third party website.The sole responsibility of supplies, condition of the product, availability of stock, date of delivery, mode of payment will be as promised by the said third party only. Prices and specifications may vary from the OUP India site.

ISBN:

9780195633917

Publication date:

01/07/1998

Paperback

304 pages

New Edition Edition

Khurshidul Islam, Ralph Russell

The three great poets presented in this volume - Mir, Mir Hasan and Sauda - lived in Delhi, or in its general vicinity, in the eighteenth century during a time of widespread violence and disaster. The Mughal Empire was crumbling and disintegrating internally as the great feudal nobles fought among themselves for control of the emperor.

Rights:  World Rights

New Edition Edition

Khurshidul Islam, Ralph Russell

Description

The three great poets presented in this volume - Mir, Mir Hasan and Sauda - lived in Delhi, or in its general vicinity, in the eighteenth century during a time of widespread violence and disaster. The Mughal Empire was crumbling and disintegrating internally as the great feudal nobles fought among themselves for control of the emperor. In this atmosphere of misery, demoralization, and despair occurred the first major flowering of Urdu literature.

Sauda, the first to be discussed, wrote poems in all the main classical forms, but he was an unequalled satirist in an age that cried for satire, and it is that portion of his work that is considered here.

Mir Hasan also was born in Delhi and probably lived there until after the occupation, massacre, and looting of 1739, which occurred when he was about fourteen. Like his two contmporaries, he wrote in all the classical forms and excelled in one, to which he devoted most of his effort. In his case it was the mansavi, a long narrative poem in rhymed couplets often telling a love story.

Mir, perhaps the greatest of the three, is, in the opinion of the authors, one of the great love poems of world literature. His favourite form was the ghazal, a subtle and difficult one which the authors discuss in detail, giving numerous examples.

In presenting these Mughal poets, the authors have let the literature speak for itself wherever possible, adding a minimum of comment.

(This is a paperback edition of the earlier hardback published in 1991.)


About the Authors

Khurshidul Islam was Professor of Urdu at Aligarh Muslim University.

Ralph Russell was Reader in Urdu at the School of Oriental and African Studies (SOAS), University of London.

New Edition Edition

Khurshidul Islam, Ralph Russell

New Edition Edition

Khurshidul Islam, Ralph Russell

New Edition Edition

Khurshidul Islam, Ralph Russell

New Edition Edition

Khurshidul Islam, Ralph Russell

Description

The three great poets presented in this volume - Mir, Mir Hasan and Sauda - lived in Delhi, or in its general vicinity, in the eighteenth century during a time of widespread violence and disaster. The Mughal Empire was crumbling and disintegrating internally as the great feudal nobles fought among themselves for control of the emperor. In this atmosphere of misery, demoralization, and despair occurred the first major flowering of Urdu literature.

Sauda, the first to be discussed, wrote poems in all the main classical forms, but he was an unequalled satirist in an age that cried for satire, and it is that portion of his work that is considered here.

Mir Hasan also was born in Delhi and probably lived there until after the occupation, massacre, and looting of 1739, which occurred when he was about fourteen. Like his two contmporaries, he wrote in all the classical forms and excelled in one, to which he devoted most of his effort. In his case it was the mansavi, a long narrative poem in rhymed couplets often telling a love story.

Mir, perhaps the greatest of the three, is, in the opinion of the authors, one of the great love poems of world literature. His favourite form was the ghazal, a subtle and difficult one which the authors discuss in detail, giving numerous examples.

In presenting these Mughal poets, the authors have let the literature speak for itself wherever possible, adding a minimum of comment.

(This is a paperback edition of the earlier hardback published in 1991.)


About the Authors

Khurshidul Islam was Professor of Urdu at Aligarh Muslim University.

Ralph Russell was Reader in Urdu at the School of Oriental and African Studies (SOAS), University of London.