Epic and sedition, the case of Ferdowsi's Shahnameh - the case of Ferdowsi's Shahnameh
Dick Davis
University of Arkansas Press (1992)
In Collection
#4836
0*
Lit Crit
Hardcover 9781557282514
Product Details
LoC Classification PK6455 .A1 1992
LoC Control Number 92003329
Dewey 891/.5511
Nationality Iran
Dust Jacket dj
No. of Pages 222
Height x Width 9.1 x 6.0  inch
User Defined
Conflict misc
Notes
1989 Publication Award of the Persian Heritage Foundation


Iran's national epic, the Shahnameh of Ferdowsi, has traditionally been regarded by both Persians and Westerners as a poem celebrating the the central role of monarchy in Persian history. In this groundbreaking book, Dick Davis argues that the poem is far more than a patriotic chronicle of kingly deeds. Rather, it is a subtle and highly ambiguous discussion of authority, and far from being a celebration of monarchy, its most famous episodes and heroes amount to a radical critique of the institution. Davis demonstrates that the public world of kingly authority is shadowed in the poem by a series of tragic father-son relationships, and that in both the royal and familial spheres, authority figures are invariably presented as morally inferior to those whom they govern. The Shahnameh's complex aesthetic structure and its tragic resolution of problems of authority and hierarchy make it an artistic artifact able to take its rightful place beside the major masterpieces of world literature.


"Ferdowsi's Shahnameh, the hero, Rostam, as a young man performs a series of heroic labors, referred to as his "haft kh'an." Much later in the poem another hero, with whom Rostam must do combat and whom he will eventually slay, also performs a parallel set of "haft kh'an."