Edited by Ulrich Marzolph
Paper - 9780814332870
Price: $31.95s
Subjects: Fairy Tales and Folklore Studies
Series: Series in Fairy-Tale Studies
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Published by Wayne State University Press
Ulrich Marzolph is professor of Islamic Studies at the Georg-August University, Göttingen, Germany, and a senior member of the editorial committee of the Enzyklopädie des Märchens, an international handbook of comparative folk narrative research. He is the editor of The Arabian Nights Reader (Wayne State University Press, 2006) and co-editor with Richard van Leeuwen of The Arabian Nights Encyclopedia (ABC-CLIO, 2006).
Other Books by Ulrich Marzolph: The Arabian Nights Reader,
“All of the articles are interesting and well-organized, and as a whole they avoid tedious duplication. One of the recurrent findings of recent studies of the Arabian Nights is that this collection often inspires its compilers, translators, and even scholars to participate in its tradition by improving, elaborating, retelling, or adding new material. Its powers of inspiration are evident in this collection of scholarship as well.”
— Journal of Folklore Research
“This volume of nineteen essays is a noteworthy and fascinating contribution to our understanding of the Arabian Nights and its cross-cultural history and influence. The essays are insightful and illuminating, and the collection itself is a valuable addition to the comparative study of literary translation and the intra- and intercultural responses that it provokes. The editor and authors are to be congratulated.”
— Peter Heath, provost of the American University of Beirut
“This book celebrates the truly global reach of the Arabian Nights over the centuries. The contributors—a gathering of some of the most creative literary critics and textual scholars active today—trace the presence of the Nights in settings as diverse as Sicilian folklore, Hawaiian newspapers, German cinema, Greek oral traditions, and Swahili-language story collections of East Africa.”
— David Pinault, associate professor of religious studies at Santa Clara University and author of Story-Telling Techniques in the Arabian Nights