The first major poet of Islamic Iran was Rudaki (Abu Abdollah Jaffar Ebn Mohammad). Rudaki was a blind poet whose fame during his own lifetime rested not only on the merit of his poetry but also on his skill in reciting and in playing the lute. Mohammad Aufi, a 12th century biographer-historiographer, describes Rudaki thus: “He was so sharp and intelligent that by the age of eight he knew all of the Koran by heart, and knew how to recite it properly, and began versifying and imparted delicate tropes; so that people favored him and his appeal grew.
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Introduction
Part I: Iranian Poets and Sufism
Unit 1: Rudaki
Unit 2: Ferdowsi, Homer of the East
Unit 3: Omar Khayyam
Unit 4: Sa‘di, the Monarch of Eloquence
Unit 5: Hafez, the Nightingale of
Unit 6: Rumi, the Supreme Mystic
Unit 7: Three Dimensions of Sufism
Part II:Iranian Languages
Unit 8: Persian Language
Unit 9: Avesta Language
Part III: Criticism and Literary Schools
Unit 10: Interpretation and Hermeneutics
Unit 11: Semiotics
Unit 12: Structuralist Criticism
Unit 13: Poststructuralism
Unit 14: Psychological and Psychoanalytic Criticism
Unit 15: What Is a Text?
References