An edition of The literature of Georgia (1994)

The literature of Georgia

a history = Kʻartʻuli literaturis istoria

2nd rev. ed.
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Last edited by MARC Bot
July 16, 2024 | History
An edition of The literature of Georgia (1994)

The literature of Georgia

a history = Kʻartʻuli literaturis istoria

2nd rev. ed.
  • 1 Want to read

Early thirteenth-century Georgian had as many speakers and readers as English in Shakespeare's day, and medieval Georgian literature is important in terms of world cultural history, representing a bridge between classical and oriental worlds. Donald Rayfield analyses the literature in the context of Greek, Persian, and Russian influences, and presents its hitherto overlooked, rich and unique artistry.

In 1225 the Mongols broke up the Georgian state and crippled its culture: Rayfield describes the dormancy of literature until an eighteenth-century Renaissance, and the subsequent flourishing artistry of the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries when, under the auspices of symbolism and futurism, Georgian poetry and prose achieved real originality. The world-class poetry of Vazha Pshavela, Galaktion Tabidze, and Paolo Iashvili is discussed here, as are the Soviet period novelists Konstantine Gamsakhurdia, Grigol Robakidze, and Mikheil Javakhishvili, writer of the much acclaimed Kvachi Kvachantiradze.

The History ends with a study of living writers, the novelists Otar Chiladze and Chabua Amirejibi, and poets such as Ana Kalandadze and Lia Sturua. A major contribution to an area of growing interest, this concise but thorough history combines clarity and accessibility for the non-specialist, with a wide breadth of cultural reference.

This is the first comprehensive and objective history of the literature of Georgia to be written in any language. The literature is revealed to be unique among that of the former Russian empire in its combination of quality and length of literary tradition.

Beginning with the first, overwhelmingly religious texts of the fifth century, Donald Rayfield charts the development of Georgian literature under Byzantine tutelage to the 'golden age' of medieval literature, which culminated in Rustaveli's great poetic work The Knight in the Panther's Skin. The second half of the work deals with the diverse literature of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries.

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Publish Date
Publisher
Curzon Press
Language
English
Pages
320

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Edition Availability
Cover of: The literature of Georgia
The literature of Georgia: a history
2010, Garnett Press
in English - 3rd, revised and expanded ed.
Cover of: The literature of Georgia
The literature of Georgia: a history = Kʻartʻuli literaturis istoria
2000, Curzon Press
in English - 2nd rev. ed.
Cover of: The Literature of Georgia
The Literature of Georgia: A History
March 23, 1995, Oxford University Press, USA
in English
Cover of: The literature of Georgia
The literature of Georgia: a history
1994, Clarendon Press, Oxford University Press
in English

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Book Details


Table of Contents

Machine generated contents note: PART I
THE MAKING OF THE CLASSICAL AGE
THE FIFTH TO THE ELEVENTH CENTURIES: ASCETICISM & BYZANTIUM
1. Laying the foundation 19
2. Lyrical poetry: hymnography 27
3. Original prose: from homilies to hagiography 40
4. The Lives of the Fathers: Serapion Zarzmeli, Grigol Khandzteli 50
5. Chronicles: the 'Conversion' and 'Life' of Georgia 56
6. The dawn of secular literature: Balahvar and lodasap 63
PART II
THE GOLDEN AGE, THE FALL & THE RESURRECTION
THE TWELFTH TO THE EIGHTEENTH CENTURIES: COURT & COURTLY LOVE
7. Prose romance: Rustaveli's precursors 69
8. Rustaveli and The Knight in the Panther Skin 76
9. Religious literature of the Golden Age 87
10. The later chronicles 91
11. Rebuilding on a tabula rasa 96
12. The authorial persona: King Teimuraz I 102
13. Kings and enlightenment 10o7
14. Three great poets: Guramishvili, Sayat-Nova and Besiki 15
15. The last gasps of the eighteenth century 2z6
PART 111
ROMANTIC & CIVIC LITERATURE
THE NINETEENTH CENTURY: RUSSIAN TUTELAGE
16. Exiled royalty: the Bagration writers 131
17. Romantic poets: Chavchavadze, the Orbelianis, Baratashvili 138
18. The birth of modern prose and drama 150
19. The luminaries: Ilia Chavchavadze and Akaki Tsereteli 159
20. Lesser luminaries: populists and pedagogues 169
21. Melodrama, revolt and commercial literature 175
PART IV
THE REDISCOVERY OF ROOTS
1880-1914: VAZHA-PSHAVELA & HEROIC FOLK POETRY
22. Vazha-Pshavela 187
23. Folk poetry and its relevance to literature 196
PART V
THE AGE OF INTERNATIONALISM
THE TWENTIETH CENTURY: THE DASHING OF HOPE
24. Two theatres: the political arena and drama 211
25. Narrative prose and Mikheil Javakhishvili zi6
26. Dreaming poets: Grishashvili, Robakidze and the Blue Horns 227
27. Mythmakers under Socialism: Shanshiashvili, Konstantine Gamsakhurdia 245
28. The poetry of Galaktion Tabidze, Giorgi Leonidze and Simon Chikovani 251
29. Beria's Holocaust 261
30. Literature after the Great Terror 27I
31. From thaw to deluge 279
Notes 293
Bibliography 303
Index 311.

Edition Notes

English and Georgian.
Includes bibliographical references (p. 303-310) and index.

Published in
Surrey
Series
Caucasus world
Other Titles
Kʻartʻuli literaturis istoria

Classifications

Dewey Decimal Class
899/.96909
Library of Congress
PK9160 .R39 2000, PK9160.R39 2000, PK9160 .R39 2013eb

The Physical Object

Pagination
320 p. :
Number of pages
320

ID Numbers

Open Library
OL3997256M
Internet Archive
literatureofgeor0000rayf
ISBN 10
0700711635
LCCN
2001339914
OCLC/WorldCat
45077926, 868928486
Goodreads
1285540

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