Events

Celebrating Recent Work by Hamid Dabashi

New Books in the Arts and Sciences

Cosponsors
  • Office of the Divisional Deans in the Faculty of Arts and Sciences
  • Middle East Institute
  • The Department of Middle Eastern, South Asian, and African Studies
  • Institute for Comparative Literature and Society
  • Columbia University Press
Notes
  • Free and open to the public
  • No registration necessary
  • First come, first seated

Listen to the podcast here.

New Books in the Arts & Sciences:
Celebrating Recent Work by Hamid Dabashi

The Shahnameh: The Persian Epic as World Literature
By: Hamid Dabashi

The Shahnameh, an epic poem recounting the foundation of Iran across mythical, heroic, and historical ages, is the beating heart of Persian literature and culture. Composed by Abu al-Qasem Ferdowsi over a thirty-year period and completed in the year 1010, the epic has entertained generations of readers and profoundly shaped Persian culture, society, and politics. For a millennium, Iranian and Persian-speaking people around the globe have read, memorized, discussed, performed, adapted, and loved the poem.

In this book, Hamid Dabashi brings the Shahnameh to renewed global attention, encapsulating a lifetime of learning and teaching the Persian epic for a new generation of readers. Dabashi insightfully traces the epic’s history, authorship, poetic significance, complicated legacy of political uses and abuses, and enduring significance in colonial and postcolonial contexts. In addition to explaining and celebrating what makes the Shahnameh such a distinctive literary work, he also considers the poem in the context of other epics, such as the Aeneid or the Odyssey, and critical debates over the concept of world literature. Arguing that Ferdowsi’s epic and its reception broached an idea of world literature long before nineteenth-century Western literary criticism, Dabashi makes a powerful case that we need to rethink the very notion of “world literature” in light of his reading of the Persian epic.

Participants
  • Author Hamid Dabashi Hagop Kevorkian Professor of Iranian Studies and Comparative Literature Columbia University
  • Speaker Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak University Professor Columbia University
  • Speaker Brian Edwards Dean, School of Liberal Arts, and Professor of English Tulane University
  • Speaker Ahmad Sadri Gorter Professor of Islamic World Studies and Professor of Sociology Lake Forest College