<p/><br></br><p><b> About the Book </b></p></br></br><P>This study answers questions and addresses issues relating to the motivation for writing these works; its purpose; the role of the author; patrons and audiences; the choice of language; the place of historical writing in the debate over the suitability of Persian for scholarly writing.<p/><br></br><p><b> Book Synopsis </b></p></br></br><b>Winner of the 1999 British-Kuwait Friendship Society Prize in Middle Eastern Studies.</b> Described by the BKFS reviewer as A ground-breaking work on a subject that has been almost totally neglected.Why write history in Persian? Persian historical writing has received little attention as compared with Arabic, especially as seen in the early (pre-Mongol) period. Within the larger context of the development of Islamic historiography from the tenth through the twelfth centuries, the case of Persian historical writing demands special attention. Discussions tend to concentrate on its sources in pre-Islamic Persian and in Arabic works, while the reasons for its emergence, its connections with Iranian and Arabic models, its political and cultural functions, and its reception, have been virtually ignored. This study answers these questions and addresses issues relating to the motivation for writing the works in question; its purpose; the role of the author, patrons and audiences; the choice of language and the reasons for that choice; the place of historical writing in the broader debate over the suitability of Persian for scholarly writing.<p/><br></br><p><b> Review Quotes </b></p></br></br><br><p>Until now there has never been a substantial, detailed attempt to give a comprehensive appraisal of this literature as a whole. .. In this ground-breaking work, Julie Meisami attempts to set the record straight and put 'Persian historical writing back on the map of Islamic historiography' ... The issues she raises lead, as indeed they should, to unanswered questions that one hopes will inspire future studies and research on this topic.</p>--Elton L. Daniel, University of Hawai'i "Iranian Studies"<br><br>[Meisami is] particularly well equipped to approach Persian historical sources from a fresh angle; one that is less concerned with the reliable information' they might contain, more with why and how they were written... she has opened up many lines of inquiry, and her book comes at the right moment to influence a slowly growing body of scholarship that is seeking to understand what Persian historians regarded as meaningful and why they saw some 'events' as memorable rather than others.-- "Times Literary Supplement"<br><br>Meisami is out to set the record straight, and the result is the most original and scholarly contribution to our knowledge of the formative years of this rich and vibrant field of Persian literature.-- "Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society"<br><br>This is a highly praiseworthy undertaking that presents the first monograph ever exclusively dedicated to a comparative study of a wide range of Persian historical writing.--Christoph Werner, University of Bamberg "British Journal of Middle Eastern Studies"<br><p/><br></br><p><b> About the Author </b></p></br></br><p>Julie Scott Meisami is Lecturer in Persian at The Oriental Institute, Oxford.<p>
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