The Arabic Role in Medieval Literary History. Maria Rosa Menocal

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       The Arabic Role in Medieval Literary History

      THE MIDDLE AGES SERIES

      Ruth Mazo Karras, Series Editor

      Edward Peters, Founding Editor

       A complete list of books in the series is available from the publisher

      The Arabic Role

      in Medieval

      Literary History

       A Forgotten Heritage

      MARÍA ROSA MENOCAL

      The excerpt appearing on p. v is taken from THE NAME OF THE ROSE by Umberto Eco (translated by William Weaver), copyright © 1983 Gruppa Editoriale Fabbri-Bompiani, Sonzogno, Etas S.p.A.; English translation copyright © 1983 Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, Inc. and Martin Secker & Warburg Limited. Reprinted by permission of Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, Inc. and Martin Secker & Warburg Limited.

      Copyright © 1987 University of Pennsylvania Press. Afterword copyright © 2004

      University of Pennsylvania Press

      All rights reserved

      Printed in the United States of America on acid-free paper

      10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1

      Published by

      University of Pennsylvania Press

      Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19104-4011

      Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

      Menocal, María Rosa

      The Arabic role in medieval literary history : a forgotten heritage / María Rosa Menocal

      p. cm. (The Middle Ages Series)

      ISBN 0-8122-1324-6 (pbk. : alk. paper)

      Originally published : Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 1987. (The Middle Ages series). With new afterword.

      Includes bibliographical references (p. ) and index.

      1. Literature, Medieval—Arab influences. 2. Romance literature—Arab influences. 3. Literature, Medieval—Research. 4. Romance literature—Research. I. Title. II. Series.

      PN682.A67 M46 2003

      809'.02—dc22

      2003065792

      Designed by Adrianne Onderdonk Dudden

      “But now tell me,” William was saying, “why? Why did you want to shield this book more than so many others. . . . Why did this one fill you with such fear?” “Because it was by the Philosopher. Every book by that man has destroyed a part of the learning that Christianity had accumulated over the centuries. The fathers had said everything that needed to be known about the power of the Word, but then Boethius had only to gloss the Philosopher and the divine mystery of the Word was transformed into a human parody of categories and syllogisms. The Book of Genesis says what has to be known about the composition of the cosmos, but it sufficed to rediscover the Physics of the Philosopher to have the universe conceived in terms of dull and slimy matter, and the Arab Averroes almost convinced everyone of the eternity of the world.”

      —Umberto Eco, The Name of the Rose

       Contents

       Preface

       CHAPTER ONE

       The Myth of Westernness in Medieval Literary Historiography

       CHAPTER TWO

       Rethinking the Background

       CHAPTER THREE

       The Oldest Issue: Courtly Love

       CHAPTER FOUR

       The Newest “Discovery”: The Muwashshaḥāt

       CHAPTER FIVE

       Italy, Dante, and the Anxieties of Influence

       CHAPTER SIX

       Other Readers, Other Readings

       AFTERWORD

       Bibliography

       Index

       Preface

      Les étymologies arabes assignées par M. Ribera aux mots troubadour . . . ne convaincront certainement personne. (Alfred Jeanroy, La poésie lyrique des troubadours, 1934)

      Accident and coincidence play as prominent a role in directing and shaping an individual’s work as do perspicacity and good sense, perhaps a larger one. In the case of my own interest in how western scholarship has structured its view of the medieval past, both accident and an aging Lady Philology played critical roles. The story bears telling because it is preliminary to the discussion that follows, and as a narrative of detection and discovery, I believe it to be typical of the often-blindfolded search for parts of the literary ancestry of medieval Europe that many others have undertaken.

      I began to study classical Arabic when well along in my graduate study in Romance philology, largely as a lark. I was fortunate enough to find the justification and encouragement for the venture from a professor of medieval Spanish who, as a former student of Américo Castro, was more prone to see the potential value of such an enterprise than most. But what I had assumed to be a somewhat pedantic fling became considerably more engaging, because the verb ṭaraba—meaning “to sing,” among other things—happened to be on the vocabulary list of the first-year Arabic course I was taking.1

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