home page
About Us | e-Gorgias Newsletter | At ConferencesBecome an Affiliate | Authors | Digitization Services | Publishing Services | Book Grants | Career Opportunities | Staff  



MyGorgias Account | My Wish List | Recommendations for me | My Cart  
   Home | Best Sellers | Just Published | Journals | Series | Gorgias Dissertations | Advanced Search | Contact Us | Join Mailing List    Login

To be eligible for Gorgias BiblioPerks™ and to receive a 20% discount on all online orders login or create an account (no strings attached)!
Mandaic - Buckley, Jorunn Jacobsen. Drower's Folk-Tales of Iraq  

Search:

 Gift Certificates
 Gift Suggestions
 American Christianity
 Ancient Heritage of Iraq
 Ancient Near East
 Arabic & Islamic Studies
 Armenian Studies
 Biblical Studies
 Bookends & Paraphernalia
 Byzantium
 Children's Books
 Church History
 Classics
 Dead Sea Scrolls
 Coptic & Egyptian Studies
 Eastern Christianity
 Egyptology
 Euphrates Imprint
 European Studies
 Genocide Studies
 Hebrew & Judaica
 Historical Fiction
 Journals
 Linguistics
 Literature
 Liturgy
 Mandaic
 Manuscripts
 Middle East
 Musical Recordings
 Neo-Aramaic
 Patristics
 Philosophy & Theology
 Reference
 Religion
 Series
 Subscriptions
 Syriac
 Tigris Imprint
 Travel & Missionary
 Ugaritic
 Women's Studies

Download Catalog (PDF)
Contact Us
Site Map
Return Policy
Shipping Info
Gorgias Projects


      

Buy this book together with The Great Stem of Souls by Jorunn Jacobsen Buckley
A collection of folktales from Iraq, dating from the 1930s, found in the archives of the famous English Lady E. S. Drower (1879-1972), who was novelist, folklorist, specialist on the Mandaeans, and writer of travel accounts.  New tales edited by Jorunn Buckley form a second volume of Drower’s Folktales. The stories—carrying recognizable Near Eastern folk-tale features—feature monsters and heroes, maidens and fairies and they give a vivid picture of a now extinct oral folktale tradition. This Gorgias Press edition includes previously unpublished tales in addition to those of the 1931 edition.+Mandaean priests, representatives of a religious heritage that can be traced back to Late Antique Mesopotamia, still copy their ancient literature by hand. The Great Stem of Souls is a study of the colophons –postscripts at the end of each text – that are appended to most Mandaean documents. A study of the contents of the colophons provides a framework for reconstructing Mandaean history. Save $35.70
Total List Price: $238.00
Buy both books for only $202.30

Quantity:  
 

Customers who bought this book also bought:

The Mandaeans of Iraq and Iran: Their Cults, Customs, Magic Legends, and Folklore by E Drower
No anthropologist has conducted fieldwork among the Mandaeans, not even in recent decades and therefore Drower remains a singular figure. Scholars, students, and aficionados regard her book as the work that brings the people alive.

Quantity:   

Three Mirrors for Two Biblical Ladies: The Queen of Sheba and Susanna in the Eyes of Jews, Christians, and Muslims by Fabrizio Angelo Pennacchietti
The Queen of Sheba and the slandered Susanna are biblical figures who have seized the imagination of generations of Jews, Christians and Muslims in every age and land, taking on the image best fitted to their expectations.

Quantity:   

The History, Poetry, and Genealogy of the Yemen by Elise W. Crosby
The history, poetry, and genealogy of the Yemen is the earliest known history of pre-Islamic Yemen. Attributed to the South Arabian historian ‘Abid b. Sharya al-Jurhumi d. 680 A.D.), it recounts in prose and poetry six saga cycles of ancient personages and events of the Yemen. Here, two sagas, the dispersion of Sam’s descendants from Babel to the Yemen, and the destruction of the tribes of ‘Ad and Thamud, are translated with complete annotation. The tales of Luqman b. ‘Ad and his seven vultures, Sulayman and Bilqis, the Himyarite kings, and Tasm and Jadis are given in full synopses.

Quantity:   

The Wives of the Prophet Muhammad by Bint Al-Shati
This is an account of the family life of the Prophet Muhammad, concerning the noble ladies who lived in his house. The author tries to visualize the life of each of the women, their relationships with the Prophet, and their roles as wives and women. The work is based on authentic Islamic sources such as Tabari, Waqidi, Ibn Ishaq, and Ibn Hisham. The author concentrates on the life of Muhammad among his wives, and on his treatment and discipline of them. This text gives an insight into the life of women at the beginning of the Islamic Era.

Quantity:   

The Great Treasure or Great Book, commonly called "The Book of Adam," the Mandaeans' work of highest authority by Julius Heinrich Petermann
The rare source of Mandaic doctrines, the Bible of the Nasoreans, this fascinating work has been largely unavailable until now. “The Treasures,” or Ginza, written in the Nasorean script and language, was published in 1867 by J. H. Petermann. Now with an English translation of the introduction, this scarce resource is at last available.

Quantity:   
previous | up | next
 
Buckley, Jorunn Jacobsen. Drower's Folk-Tales of Iraq  

 E-mail this product to a friend

Author: Jorunn Jacobsen Buckley
Title: Drower's Folk-Tales of Iraq
Subtitle:
Series:
Publisher: Gorgias Press LLC
Publication Date: 11/16/2007 12:00:00 AM
Availability: In Print
ISBN: 978-1-59333-360-7
Language: English
Format: Hardback 6 x 9, 1 volume(s), 490 pages, illustrations

These folktales from Iraq were collected by Lady E. S. Drower (1879-1972), the famous English intellectual, author of novels and travel accounts, and one of the world’s foremost specialists on the Mandaeans of Iraq and Iran. During her decades in Iraq, where her husband was an adviser to the government after the First World War, Lady Drower traveled about and became interested in people such as the Mandaeans, the Yezidis, the Iraqi Jews, and others. In 1931, her Folk-Tales of Iraq was published with Oxford University Press. For many decades, a typed manuscript of ca. 24 other tales lay idle among Drower’s papers. In a letter to the Secretary of Clarendon Press, Oxford, May 4, 1939, she mentions the collection and her wish to have it published, but without luck. World War II intervened, and afterwards, other editing and publishing tasks demanded Lady Drower’s time. Most of these tales are now edited and presented to the public for the first time. Various persons in Iraq—of both sexes, from high and low strata of society and from different ethnic and religious groups—related the stories (in various languages and dialects) to Drower. They deal with monsters, heroes, fairies, sultans, peasants, fishermen, and trades-people; they carry moral teachings and feature speaking animals, and some convey surprisingly subversive messages about gender relations and social power structures. A few of the tales may be known in other versions from The Thousand and One Nights. The Gorgias Press edition includes the 1931 tales as well as the previously unpublished tales.


Buckley, Jorunn Jacobsen. Drower's Folk-Tales of Iraq
ISBN:978-1-59333-360-7
Weight:2 LBS.
Price:$139.00
To get the 20% Gorgias BiblioPerks™ discount, simply login.

Quantity:   



Product Rating: (0.00)   # of Ratings: 0   (Only registered customers can rate)

There are no comments for this product.
Home | Affiliates | Privacy Policy | Copyright © 2003-2005. All Rights Reserved.
Powered by Gorgias FolioFlow, a comprehensive e-commerce solution.