Institute for the Classical Tradition
International Journal of the Classical Tradition
Peter E. Pormann, "The Arab ‘Cultural Awakening (Naha)’, 1870–1950, and the Classical Tradition," IJCT 13 (2006-2007), pp. 3-20.

The Classical Tradition is often studied from a Eurocentric point of view. The present article argues that the Arabic world is as much heir to the legacy of Greece as the ‘West’. It does so by focusing on the reception of Classical Antiquity during the so-called Arabic ‘Cultural Awakening (Nah≈a), 1870–1950. It investigates more specifically 1) how Greek epic and dramatic poetry, which had not been part of the versions produced during the great translation movement in eighth- to tenth-century Baghdad, was rendered into Arabic; 2) how Greek drama inspired Arabic playwrights, with Taufi¯q al-Îaki¯m urging his fellow countrymen to engage with the Classical heritage; and 3) how the greatest Arab intellectual of the twentieth century ™a¯ha¯ Îusain, fought for Greek and Latin teaching in schools and university.

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