Zeigen auf:
Transliteration Loc
Nationalsprache
Transliteration lat.
Transliteration RAK
Transliteration Loc
Bücher
Zeigen auf:
Transliteration Loc
Nationalsprache
Transliteration lat.
Transliteration RAK
Transliteration Loc
Zeigen auf:
Transliteration Loc
Nationalsprache
Transliteration lat.
Transliteration RAK
Transliteration Loc
Typ der Ausgabe
Region des Verlags
скрыть невыбранное
показать все »
Herausgegeben
Filtereinstellungen zurücksetzen
0
0
Warenkorb
0
Favoriten
alles löschen
Typ der Ausgabe
Region des Verlags
скрыть невыбранное
показать все »
Herausgegeben
Filtereinstellungen zurücksetzen

Kale ya washairi wa Pemba

Kamange na Sarahani

es ist herausgegeben in
Dar es Salaam
Erscheinungsjahr
2012
Seiten
150
Umschlag
Soft
Gewicht
0,585 kg
ISBN
9789987080854
29 USD
Lieferkosten:
20 USD
hinzufügen in
hinzufügen in
The title of this collection of poetry, Kale ya Washairi wa Pemba: Kamange na Sarahani is translated as, 'The Past of Pemba Poets: Kamange and Sarahani'. Pemba, for those who may need reminding is the smaller of the two islands known as Zanzibar, the other being Unguja. The poets whose works make up the collection lived between the last half of the 19th and early 20th century in Pemba, but their poetry was known and much appreciated throughout the Swahili world of the time, meaning the coastal towns of East Africa, in particular, Mombasa, Lamu, Zanzibar and other settlements. The two famous and rival poets, Kamange and Sarahani, were influenced, as all artists inevitably are, by their environment and culture, among the most important of its manifestations being religion and language. Both of them were Muslims, and were therefore influenced by Islamic literature and Arabic language. But they were also influenced by the multiplicity of Swahili sub-cultures and dialects - which were not in fact called Swahili but Kim vita, Kiamu, Kipemba, Kimrima and Kivumba respectively (for the Swahili spoken in Mombasa, Lamu, Pemba, Vanga and Wasini off the Southern Kenya coast) and several others. One aspect of the richness of the collection of Kamange and Sarahani's poetry is the length and breadth of their command of the different dialects. At the height of their fame, the two poets divided the world of poetry into followers of Kamange or Sarahani. This rivalry became even fiercer after Kamange's death with Sarahani refusing to be engaged in it, because as he voiced it, in the absence of his real sparring partner there was no one to pit himself against. Kamange was the boisterous, and daring one writing on subjects of love and bravery while Sarahani was interested in religion erudition, philosophy and moral instruction. The collectors of the poems, Abdurrahman Saggaf Alawy and Ali Abdala El Maawy saved the poems from extinction after the1964 revolution in Zanzibar and kept them for more than forty years before presenting them
0
Warenkorb
0
Favoriten
alles löschen