ABSTRACT

Writing in the eighteenth century, the Persian-language litterateurs of late Mughal Delhi were aware that they could no longer take for granted the relations of Persian with Islamic imperial power, relations that had enabled Persian literary life to flourish in India since the tenth century C.E.

Persian Authorship and Canonicity in Late Mughal Delhi situates the diverse textual projects of ‘Abd al-Qādir “Bīdil” and his students within the context of politically threatened but poetically prestigious Delhi, exploring the writers’ use of the Perso-Arabic and Hindavi literary canons to fashion their authorship. Breaking with the tendency to categorize and characterize Persian literature according to the dynasty in power, this book argues for the indirectness and complexity of the relations between poetics and politics. Among its original contributions is an interpretation of Bīdil’s Sufi adaptation of a Braj-Avadhi tale of utopian Hindu kingship, a novel hypothesis on the historicism of Sirāj al-Din ‘Alī Khān “Ārzū”s oeuvre and a study of how Bindrāban Dās “Khvushgū" entwined the contrasting models of authorship in Bīdil and Ārzū to formulate his voice as a Sufi historian of the Persian poetic tradition.

The first book-length work in English on ‘Abd al-Qādir “Bīdil” and his circle of Persian literati, this is a valuable resource for students and scholars of both South Asian and Iranian studies, as well as Persian literature and Sufism.

chapter |14 pages

Introduction

Political frailty and poetic power in late Mughal Delhi

chapter 1|46 pages

Bīdil's portrait

Ekphrasis as ascetic self-transformation

chapter 2|29 pages

Bīdil’s tarjī‘-band

The author's kenotic chorus

chapter 3|37 pages

A Hindu allegory of the Islamic philosopher-king

The tale of Madan and Kāmdī in Bīdil’s ma snavī ‘Irfān

chapter 4|24 pages

The local universality of poetic pleasure

Sirāj al-Dīn ‘Alī Khān “Ārzū” and the speaking subject

chapter 5|24 pages

Khvushgū's dream of Ḥāfiẓ

Building an ark with Ārzū and Bīdil