Encyclopædia Iranica
Table of Contents
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HAFEZ iii. HAFEZ’S POETIC ART
J. T. P. de Bruijn
Perhaps the greatest progress in research on Hafez during the past century has been made in the domain of philology. Critical editions have been published which begin to provide a reliable basis for the study of Hafez’s poetry.
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HAFEZ iv. LEXICAL STRUCTURE OF HAFEZ’S GHAZALS
D. Meneghini Correale
Despite limitations, it is nevertheless necessary to base textual criticism on complete and reliable lexico-statistical inventories of Hafez’s ghazals.
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HAFEZ v. MANUSCRIPTS OF HAFEZ
Julie Scott Meisami
A major concern of 20th-century Hafez scholarship has been the establishment of a reliable text of his poems.
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HAFEZ vi. PRINTED EDITIONS OF THE DIVĀN OF HAFEZ
Bahaʾ-al-Din Khorramshahi and EIr
Printed editions of Hafez’s poems include partial and complete collections, non-critical and critical editions, in lithographic, calligraphic, facsimile, and typeset formats. The earliest printed editions appeared outside of Persia. The first lithograph edition was commissioned by Richard Johnson of the East India Company and published by Upjohn’s Calcutta press in 1791.
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HAFEZ viii. HAFEZ AND RENDI
Franklin Lewis
Rend, variously translated in English as “rake, ruffian, pious rogue, brigand, libertine, lout, debauchee,” is the very antithesis of establishment propriety.
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HAFEZ ix. HAFEZ AND MUSIC
Franklin Lewis
The poetics of Hafez, perhaps more so than many Persian poets, depends on a sensuality of language and imagery. Smell, taste, texture, color and certainly sound imagery abound.
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HAFEZ x. TRANSLATIONS OF HAFEZ IN ENGLISH
Parvin Loloi
The first poem by Hafez to appear in English was the work of Sir William Jones (1746-94).
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HAFEZ xi. TRANSLATIONS OF HAFEZ IN GERMAN
Hamid Tafazoli
The name of Hafez is closely associated with that of Johann Wolfgang von Goethe in German literature. This is directly attributable to the status Goethe accords Hafez in his West-West-östlicher Divan (1819).
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HAFEZ xii. HAFEZ AND THE VISUAL ARTS
Priscilla Soucek
The 16th century constitutes the apex in production for illustrated copies of Hafez’s Divān; they were made in several places for a range of patrons. The largest group of the illustrated Hafez manuscripts was produced in Shiraz, the most impressive among them dating to the 1580s.
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HAFEZ xiii. - xiv. HAFEZ’S TOMB (ḤĀFEẒIYA)
Kuros Kamali Sarvestani
The Hafeziya is located south of the Koran Gate (Darvāza-ye Qorʾān) on the northern edge of Shiraz. It is on the site of the famous Golgašt-e Moṣallā, the pleasure ground often mentioned in the poems of Hafez and occupies about 19,000 square meters, incorporating one of Shiraz’s most famous cemeteries, Ḵāk-e Moṣallā.
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