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Chapter 1 interrogates a referential frame that happened to inform a cultural milieu and legitimize the use of the term “Arabian Nightism” in discussions that relate to presumed sumptuousness and lavish spending. The phrasing shows, however, how the Nights permeates a consciousness and how it inhabits the European and American culture in multifarious ways and contexts that justify addressing it as a knowledge consortium, an epistemic inception that continued to direct or challenge regimes of thought. Its trajectory in these cultures demonstrate constants and variables in reception and appropriation, and invite us to draw a comparison with its native culture in relation to issues of literacy and orality.
The stories in the Thousand and One Nights, or the Arabian Nights, are familiar to many of us: from the tales of Aladdin, Sinbad the Sailor, Ali Baba and his forty thieves, to the framing story of Scheherazade telling these stories to her homicidal husband, Shahrayar. This book offers a rich and wide-ranging analysis of the power of this collection of tales that penetrates so many cultures and appeals to such a variety of predilections and tastes. It also explores areas that were left untouched, like the decolonization of the Arabian Nights, and its archaeologies. Unique in its excavation into inroads of perception and reception, Muhsin J. al-Musawi's book unearths means of connection with common publics and learned societies. Al-Musawi shows, as never before, how the Arabian Nights has been translated, appropriated, and authenticated or abused over time, and how its reach is so expansive as to draw the attention of poets, painters, illustrators, translators, editors, musicians, political scientists like Leo Strauss, and novelists like Michel Butor, James Joyce and Marcel Proust amongst others. Making use of documentaries, films, paintings, novels and novellas, poetry, digital forums and political jargon, this book offers nuanced understanding of the perennial charm and power of this collection.
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