The hero cycles of Arabic belong to the literary tradition of 'The Arabian Nights' and can be seen as the popular epics of their civilization. 'The Arabian Epic' covers ten of the main representatives of this genre. Each of these has been developed through the processes of oral storytelling through an accumulation of narrative and folklore motifs, many of which belong to what can be seen as a universal tradition. This work is published in three volumes. The first volume introduces the background and the dimensions in which the cycles are set, while the second volume analyzes their contents and the literary formulae used in their construction, as well as listing analogues found in other literatures. The examples surveyed in the final volume provide non-Arabists with a more immediate insight into the contents of the cycles, drawing attention to their narrative coloring and texture.
Author(s): Malcolm Cameron Lyons
Series: University of Cambridge Oriental Publications, 49
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Year: 1995
Language: English
Pages: 504
Introduction to volume two page I
'Alī al-Zaibaq 9
Sīrat'Antar 18
Sīrat al-Ẓāhir Baibars 45
Sīrat Banī Hilāl al-Kubrā 120
Taghrībat Banī Hilāl 136
Qişşat Abū Zaid al-Hilālī wa'l-Nā'isa 148
Sīrat al-Amīra Dhāt al-Himma 151
Fīrūz Shāh 212
Sīrat Hamza 223
Sīrat Saif b. Dhī Yazan 239
Sīrat Saif al-Tījān 266
Qişşat al-Zīr 273
Narrative index 277
Source references 319
Comparative index 35