Samad Behrangi (1939–1968), Jalāl Āl-e Ahmad (1923–1969), and ⊂Ali Shari⊂ati (1933–1977) were perhaps ...
Tópico(s): Islamic Studies and History
1983 - Cambridge University Press | International Journal Middle East Studies
Michael C. Hillman, Samad Behrangi, Mary Hooglund, Eric Hooglund,
Tópico(s): Politics and Conflicts in Afghanistan, Pakistan, and Middle East
1977 - University of Oklahoma | World Literature Today
... Black Fish and Other Modern Persian Stories. By Samad Behrangi Translated by Mary and Eric Hooglund with a ...
Tópico(s): Islamic Studies and History
1977 - Cambridge University Press | Iranian Studies
... studies to trace the defanging and domestication of Samad Behrangi’s The Little Black Fish , a children’s ...
Tópico(s): Diaspora, migration, transnational identity
2018 - Cambridge University Press | Iranian Studies
Samad Behrangi, who is known as one of the most significant revolutionary writers of modern literature in Iran, ... resistance and the various difficulties on his way. Samad Behrangi’s story profoundly shows the road to freedom ...
Tópico(s): Foucault, Power, and Ethics
2023 - | International Journal of Linguistics Literature & Translation
... artistic examples. Habib Sahir, Rahim Cadniku, Ganjali Sabahi, Samad Behrangi, Ismayil Hadi, Nasir Manzuri, etc. Prose samples, which ...
Tópico(s): Linguistics and Cultural Studies
2023 - EDP Sciences | SHS Web of Conferences
... s pioneer author of modern children’s literature, Samad Behrangi. It illustrates how, in his stories for children, ...
Tópico(s): Islamic Studies and History
2021 - Routledge | British Journal of Middle Eastern Studies
... authors who wrote stories benefited allegorical structure was Samad Behrangi. Although his stories seemingly suit for children, they ...
Tópico(s): Linguistic, Cultural, and Literary Studies
2012 - | International Journal of Basic and Applied Sciences
... some of the truly engaged intellectuals, such as Samad Behrangi.) Her use of direct quotes, both in the ...
Tópico(s): Islamic Studies and History
2003 - Middle East Institute | The Middle East Journal