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Poems for the millennium : the University of California book of North African literature. Volume four /

In this fourth volume of the landmark Poems for the Millennium series, Pierre Joris and Habib Tengour present a comprehensive anthology of the written and oral literatures of the Maghreb, the region of North Africa that spans the modern nation states of Libya, Tunisia, Algeria, Morocco, and Mauritan...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Clasificación:Libro Electrónico
Otros Autores: Joris, Pierre, Tengour, Habib
Formato: Electrónico eBook
Idioma:Inglés
Publicado: Berkeley : University of California Press, 2012.
Colección:Poems for the millennium ; v. 4
Temas:
Acceso en línea:Texto completo
Tabla de Contenidos:
  • Cover; Title; Copyright; Contents; Prologue; Thanks and Acknowledgments; Introduction; A Book of Multiple Beginnings; Prologue; The First Human Beings, Their Sons and Amazon Daughters; Hanno the Navigator (Carthage, c. sixth century B.C.E.); from The Periplos of Hanno; Callimachus (Cyrene, 310-c. 240 B.C.E.); Thirteen Epigrammatic Poems; Mago (Carthage, pre-second century B.C.E.); from De Agricultura; Lucius Apuleius (Madaurus, now M'Daourouch, c. 123-c. 180 C.E.); from The Golden Ass, or Metamorphoses; Quintus Septimius Florens Tertullianus (Carthage, c. 160-c. 220 C.E.).
  • From De Pallio (The Cloak)from Scorpiace (The Scorpion); Thascius Caecilius Cyprianus (Carthage, early third century-258 C.E.); from Epistle to Donatus; Lucius Lactantius (Cirta? c. 240-Trier? c. 320 C.E.); from De Ave Phoenice; Aurelius Augustinus Hipponensis (Saint Augustine) (Thagaste, 354-Hippo, 430 C.E.); from Confessions; from De Doctrina Christiana; from De fide rerum invisibilium; from Psalmus contra partem Donati; Blossius Aemilius Dracontius (Carthage, c. 455-c. 505 C.E.); The Chariot of Venus; De Mensibus (Months); The Origin of Roses; Luxorius (Carthage, sixth century C.E.).
  • "They say, that when the fierce bear gives birth"Premature Chariot; First Diwan A Book of In-Betweens: Al-Andalus, Sicily, the Maghreb Prologue; Prologue; Anonymous Muwashshaha; Some Kharjas; Ibn Hani al-Andalusi (Seville, c. 934-Barqa, Libya, 973); Al-Jilnar; Extinction Is the Truth ... ; Ibn Darradj al-Qastalli (958-1030); from Ode in Praise of Khairan al-'Amiri, Emir of Almería; from Ode in Praise of al-Mansur al-'Amiri, Emir of Córdoba; Abu Amir Ibn Shuhayd (Córdoba, 992-1035); from Qasida (I); Córdoba; from Qasida (II); "As he got his fill of delirious wine"; Gravestone Qasida.
  • Yusuf Ibn Harun al-Ramadi (d. c. 1022)Hugging Letters and Beauty Spots; Silver Breast; Gold Nails; The Swallow; O Rose ... ; Yosef Ibn Abitur (mid-tenth century-c. 1012); The "Who?" of Ibn Abitur of Córdoba; Hafsa bint Hamdun (Wadi al-Hijara, now Guadalajara, tenth century); Four Poems; Samuel Ha-Levi Ibn Nagrella, called ha-Nagid, ""the Prince"" (Merida, 993-Granada, 1055); Three Love Poems; War Poem; Ibn Hazm (Córdoba, 994-Niebla, 1064); My Heart; from The Neck-Ring of the Dove; Wallada bint al-Mustakfi (Córdoba, 994-1091); Six Poems.
  • Ibn Rashiq al-Qayrawani (also al-Masili) (Masila, Algeria, c. 1000-Mazara, Sicily, c. 1064)from Lament over the Fall of the City of Kairouan; Ibn Zaydun (Córdoba, 1003-1071); Fragments from the Qasida in the Rhyme of Nun; Written from al-Zahra'; Salomon Ibn Gabirol (Malaga, c. 1020-Valencia, c. 1058); The 16-Year-Old Poet; from The Crown of Kingdom; Al Mu'tamid Ibn Abbad (Seville, 1040-Aghmat, 1095); To Abu Bakr Ibn 'Ammar Going to Silves; To Rumaykiyya; Ibn Hamdis (Noto, Sicily, 1056-Majorca, 1133); He Said, Remembering Sicily and His Home, Syracuse.