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Showing 2 results for Bashiri
Phd Sina Bashiri, Ghodratollah Taheri, Volume 31, Issue 94 (6-2023)
Abstract
Modern art and literature transformed the foundations of modern aesthetics by paying attention to the negative and unconventional philosophical topics that did not play an important role in classical aesthetics. “Death” is known as one of the central elements of modern literature based on the thoughts of the existentialist and post-structuralist schools. In the modern novel, death plays an essential role in the structure and texture of the story in terms of content, language, and art; and many of the aesthetic aspects of the novel revolve around it. Sadeghi, as one of the leading writers of Iran, made “death” the subject of his novel, “Malakut”, and used many of the literary aspects of his work around this concept. In this research, using the descriptive-analytical method, the aesthetic aspects of death in “Malakut” have been analyzed, which are tied to other components of modern aesthetics. The findings of the study show that the relationship between death and other components of modern aesthetics such as paradox, absence, and ambiguity has led to the importance of the dark aspects of existence as well as the rejection of the work based on the classical and conventional standards of aesthetics.
Sinâ Bashiri, Qodratullâh Tâheri, Volume 33, Issue 98 (5-2025)
Abstract
Life in the modern world is accompanied by anxiety, meaninglessness, and despair, which ultimately culminates in the inescapable fate of death – a theme that has become a central focus in modern art and literature. Due to his pessimistic worldview and his fascination with the concept of death, Hedāyat made the existential impact of death on human life the subject of many of his stories. In Hedāyat’s works, most of the characters suffer from a kind of isolation, pessimism, nihilism, and neurosis, which in many cases lead to their death or suicide. In this article, using a descriptive-analytical method, the fundamental significance of the concepts of "madness" and "terror of death" and the function of madness in confronting the terror of death in Hedāyat’s stories, Buried Alive (Zendeh beh Gur) and Three Drops of Blood (Seh Qatreh Khun), were analyzed. The findings showed that in Hedāyat’s stories, by rendering modern life futile and meaningless and by emptying individuals’ minds, madness plays with death and the terror arising from it, and liberates the characters’ minds from existential anxiety and concerns. By renouncing life before death and making an ironic use of suicide, madness ultimately frees the individuals from the terror of death.
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