The “human mud” is one of the motifs of the poetry attributed to Khayyam. The imagery, concepts and philosophical thoughts about the human being's origin (creation, death, life after death) form the essence of this poetry. Are the Khayyam's quatrains about creation original and new? Or do they have a precedent in the ancient world poetry? Why does the Iranian literary criticism claim that this sort of poetry about the mystrey of human creation is Khayyamian? This paper explores the concept of the human mud in the ancient Egyptian, Accadian, Hebrew, Greek, Latin, Arab, and Persian potery.
Keywords: Khayyam, human mud, philosophia perennis, death
Kazzazi, M. J., Nikoubakht, N., & Gaja, R. (2009). of the articlesPrecedent of the Khayyamian motif of the human mudin the world classical poetry. New Literary Studies, 42(3), 1-21. doi: 10.22067/jls.v42i3.4192
MLA
Mir Jallaloddin Kazzazi; Naser Nikoubakht; Ramon Gaja. "of the articlesPrecedent of the Khayyamian motif of the human mudin the world classical poetry", New Literary Studies, 42, 3, 2009, 1-21. doi: 10.22067/jls.v42i3.4192
HARVARD
Kazzazi, M. J., Nikoubakht, N., Gaja, R. (2009). 'of the articlesPrecedent of the Khayyamian motif of the human mudin the world classical poetry', New Literary Studies, 42(3), pp. 1-21. doi: 10.22067/jls.v42i3.4192
VANCOUVER
Kazzazi, M. J., Nikoubakht, N., Gaja, R. of the articlesPrecedent of the Khayyamian motif of the human mudin the world classical poetry. New Literary Studies, 2009; 42(3): 1-21. doi: 10.22067/jls.v42i3.4192
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