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In their study of a seminal twentieth-century Persian poet, Rouhollah Zarei and Roger Sedarat offer the first sustained examination of nature throughout the trajectory of Nader Naderpour's oeuvre.
Addresses the possibility of political change in a nation that some in America consider part of the axis of evil. This book explores the effects of the Islamic Revolution of 1979 including censorship, execution, and pending war on the country as well as on his understanding of his own origins.
As an Iranian American poet, the author fuses Western and Eastern traditions to reinvent the classical Persian form of the ghazal. He uses the ancient ghazal form in the tradition of the classical masters like Hafez and Rumi to politically challenge the Islamic Republic of Iran's continual crackdown on protesters.
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