Volume 3, Issue 10 (2010)                   LCQ 2010, 3(10): 0-0 | Back to browse issues page

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Fotoohi M. Sufi Discourse from Constructed to Deconstructed (Distinguishing Two Types of Sufi Prose Writing). LCQ 2010; 3 (10)
URL: http://lcq.modares.ac.ir/article-29-1065-en.html
Persian literature, Ferdowsi University, Mashhad, Iran
Abstract:   (6667 Views)
This article has categorized Sufi prose in two contrasting species: the first is constructed discourse (kalām-e motamakken) and second one is deconstructed discourse (kalām-e Maqlub). These two terms have been used by Sufis in their books. The distinguishing bases of these two discourses are the epistemic origin, source of knowledge, text content and the function of language in Sufi discourse. Constructed texts contain social concepts of Sufism and originate from a collective and ideological knowledge. Indeed they organize a group state and the language plays the role of a regulator in them. The deconstructed discourse is the second group of texts that have their roots in personal experiences and create a new imaginative and textual world. A deconstructed text, in terms of implications, is an open text that is flexible for interpretation and metaphorical pole of language dominates it, while constructed text hinders further interpretation. The article at the end shows the transformation process of Sufi prose from the constructed discourse word by word to the deconstructed discourse.
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Article Type: Theoretical | Subject: stylistics|literary genre
Received: 2011/04/13 | Accepted: 2011/04/13 | Published: 2011/04/13

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