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Showing 2 results for Parallelism
, , , Volume 24, Issue 81 (2-2017)
Abstract
In this article, the aim of the authors is to study the role of repetition in creating music and parallelism in Nimayee poems in the three collections of poems by Mehdi Akhavan Sales: Zamestan, Akhere Shahname and Az Avesta. Accordingly, the researchers have investigated the various manners of repetition in creating parallelism in the poems at three levels: phonological parallelism, lexical parallelism and syntactic parallelism. The present article tries to show that the musical parallelism in Akhavan’s Nimayee poems rises from the phonological, lexical and syntactic repetition. The authors found that their phonological parallelism was based on consonant and vowel repetition in sentences and also linguistic expressions, variety of rhythms and the poet’s innovation in using some Nimayee rhythms. Moreover, the repetition of words in different manners and the use of rhyme and range have created the lexical parallelism in Akhavan’s poems. Finally, employing some figures of speech syntagmatically and paradigmatically have created the syntactic parallelism in this poems.
Amirmahdi Safaeidaryakenari, Somaye Aghababaei, Batool Vaez, Volume 33, Issue 99 (10-2025)
Abstract
Defining typological boundaries within the prose-to-poetry continuum remains a fundamental challenge in literary linguistics. This study aims to redefine the typology of hybrid texts through a comparative analysis of foregrounding elements in Ahmad Shamlou’s Ibrahim dar Atash (as a model of blank verse) and Forough Farrokhzad’s Tavalodi digar and Iman Biavarim be Aghaz-e Fasl-e Sard (as models of Nimaic poetry). The research methodology is descriptive-analytical, employing a quantitative-qualitative approach based on Geoffrey Leech’s theory of deviation and the theoretical frameworks of Safavi and Haghshenas. The findings indicate that, contrary to previous theoretical assumptions, the frequency and quality of parallelisms serve as the primary determinant of a text’s position toward the poetry prototype, while linguistic deviation merely acts as an entry point into literary language. Data mining reveals that Shamlou utilizes "compensatory parallelisms" (such as rhyme with an average frequency of 4.86 and dense phonological patterns) to offset the absence of prosodic meter. In contrast, Farrokhzad, by relying on "conversational prosody," demonstrates a lesser need for positional parallelisms and diverse deviations. Ultimately, this study proposes that the poetic caliber and the distinction between hybrid genres are governed by a musical hierarchy derived from parallelism, through which the precise position of any text within the aforementioned continuum can be identified.
Defining typological boundaries within the prose-to-poetry continuum remains a fundamental challenge in literary linguistics. This study aims to redefine the typology of hybrid texts through a comparative analysis of foregrounding elements in Ahmad Shamlou’s Ibrahim dar Atash (as a model of blank verse) and Forough Farrokhzad’s Tavalodi digar and Iman Biavarim be Aghaz-e Fasl-e Sard (as models of Nimaic poetry). The research methodology is descriptive-analytical, employing a quantitative-qualitative approach based on Geoffrey Leech’s theory of deviation and the theoretical frameworks of Safavi and Haghshenas. The findings indicate that, contrary to previous theoretical assumptions, the frequency and quality of parallelisms serve as the primary determinant of a text’s position toward the poetry prototype, while linguistic deviation merely acts as an entry point into literary language. Data mining reveals that Shamlou utilizes "compensatory parallelisms" (such as rhyme with an average frequency of 4.86 and dense phonological patterns) to offset the absence of prosodic meter. In contrast, Farrokhzad, by relying on "conversational prosody," demonstrates a lesser need for positional parallelisms and diverse deviations. Ultimately, this study proposes that the poetic caliber and the distinction between hybrid genres are governed by a musical hierarchy derived from parallelism, through which the precise position of any text within the aforementioned continuum can be identified.
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