Title: Sufi-romantic self loss : the study of the influence of Persian sufism on English romantic poetry
Abstract: This PhD thesis explores the influence of Persian Sufi Literature on the development of the concepts of self and Other in English Romantic-period prose and poetry. The thesis considers the notions of self, idealisation, and annihilation in the poetry of Percy Bysshe Shelley and George Gordon Byron as well as the Persian Sufi literature from which these Romantic poets have drawn their inspiration and influences. The Persian poets discussed include Hafez, Maulavi, and Nezami, whose works were translated and adapted by the eighteenth-century scholars such as William Jones and Isaac D‘Israeli. The thesis presents a comparison between the two schools of thought, Lacanianism and Sufism, in order to pave the way for a comparative analysis of Sufi and Romantic conceptions of the self and Other. The thesis then goes on to discuss a range of representations of the Orient in the pre-Romantic era, including the translations and adaptations rendered by eighteenth-century Oriental scholars such as Jones and D‘Israeli. Finally the thesis focuses on the influence of Persian literature on the works of Shelley and Byron. An attempt is made in these chapters to explore the extent to which the Romantic subject‘s desire for union with the ideal Other is made possible through idealisation of and dissolution in the Other, first in the literary historical context of the Sufi tradition, and secondly in the framework of the theoretical models in Lacanian psychoanalysis. In order to analyse the concepts of self and Other in their Romantic and Sufi contexts the thesis invokes Lacan‘s discussion of supplementary jouissance and sublimation. These Lacanian formulae prove helpful in analysing the path the Romantic subject pursues toward perfection and his desire for a return to the primal state of unity which is possible through dissolution in the ideal(ised) Other. CONTENTS _________________________________ INTRODUCTION 1 1 Pre-Romantic Interest in Persian Literature 8 2 Sufism 14 3 Sufi Romanticism 19 CHAPTER I: SELF IN OTHER 34 1 Sufi Romantic Self 41 2 Against the Hegelian Dialectic 46 3 Sufi Psychoanalysis 52 CHAPTER II: A PERSIAN SONG OF JONES 73 1 Persian Jones 73 2 The Imperative of Idealisation 90 CHAPTER III: D‘ISRAELI‘S MEJNOUN AND LEILA‘ 116 1 Nezami‘s Leili va Majnoun‘: A Summary 120 2 D‘Israeli‘s Adaptation: Persian Imagery or Sufi Motifs 125 CHAPTER IV: PERSIAN MYSTIC LOVE IN SHELLEY 143 1 Persian Imageries and Motifs in Shelley‘s Later Poetry 148 2 Alastor: or, The Spirit of Solitude‘ 162 CHAPTER V: BYRONIC MEJNOUN 201 1 Persian Imageries and Motifs in Byron‘s Eastern Tales 203 2 Tasso, The Majnoun 226 CONCLUSION 244 APPENDIX: TWO TRANSLATIONS OF HAFEZ‘S GHAZAL 251 BIBLIOGRAPHY 254
Publication Year: 2011
Publication Date: 2011-10-01
Language: en
Type: dissertation
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Cited By Count: 2
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