EUME
2023/ 2024

Lara Harb

Mimesis in Classical Arabic Literature

Lara Harb is Associate Professor of Near Eastern Studies at Princeton University and specializes in Classical Arabic Literature and literary theory. She earned a PhD in Middle Eastern and Islamic Studies from New York University (2013) and a BA in Comparative Literature from Brown University (2004). Prior to joining the faculty at Princeton in 2015, Lara was assistant professor at Dartmouth College. She is the author of Arabic Poetics: Aesthetic Experience in Classical Arabic Literature (Cambridge University Press, 2020). Lara is currently working on a book-length project on mimesis in classical Arabic literature and a translation of al-Jurjani’s Asrar al-balagha (The Secrets of Eloquence). In the academic year 2023/24, she is a EUME-CNMS Fellow of the Alexander von Humboldt Foundation and hosted by the Philipps-Universität Marburg and the Forum Transregionale Studien.

Mimesis in Classical Arabic Literature

Mimesis is one of the oldest and most fundamental concepts that has shaped Western aesthetics. The relationship between a work of art and reality lies at the core of Western attempts to make sense of representational forms of expression going back to the Ancient Greeks. Significantly, the concept entered the sphere of Arabic thought in the 9th-10th centuries when Aristotle’s Poetics was translated into Arabic. However, the Arabic understanding of Aristotle’s key ideas in the Poetics, including mimesis, remains obscure. Mimesis in Classical Arabic Literature promises to be the first comprehensive study of literary representation in medieval Arabic literature. It seeks to reconstruct premodern Arabic conceptions of the relationship between a literary work and reality, on the one hand, and the psychology and ethics of how one experiences and is affected by such representations, on the other. The central argument of the book contends that mimesis in the Arabic context was understood as “comparison” instead of the standard Western understanding of it as “imitation.” As a result, the aesthetic goal of literary expression in classical Arabic literature was not verisimilitude but similarity. This requires a different strategy of reading and literary appreciation, exposing an alternative understanding of literature and the literary arts.