ABSTRACT

This book represents the first ever published introduction to the comparative study of traditional Asian literatures, embracing three vast literary zones: Arab-Islamic, Indo-South East Asian and Sino-Far Eastern. The aim of the book is to outline the main properties of Asian literatures in the period of 'reflective traditionalism' (the early centuries CE to the first half of the 19th century), when the creation of a vast body of aesthetically significant works was coupled with the emergence of literary self-awareness: when the nature of the creative process, the poetics and functions of the literary works, and the ways of their influence on the reader were thoroughly comprehended and committed to writing for the first time.
The book is intended for specialists in Asian literatures, comparative literature, and literary theory, and for students of these topics.

chapter |36 pages

Introduction

chapter |51 pages

Literary Aggregations

chapter |118 pages

Self-Awareness of Zone-Shaping Literatures

chapter |67 pages

The Anthropomorphism of Literary Systems

chapter |34 pages

Epilogue

Neo-Traditionalism