Analyzing the Performative Potential of Jame‘ al-Hekayat through the Lens of Brechtian Epic Theatre

Document Type : پژوهشی اصیل

Authors
1 Master’s degree in Dramatic Literature from the Honar shiraz, shiraz, Iran
2 Former instructor in the Department of Dramatic Literature at the Honar shiraz and currently a PhD student (second doctorate) in Folklore at the University of Louisiana, USA
10.48311/cfl.2025.86474.0
Abstract
Folk literature, especially within the tradition of storytelling and naqqāli, incorporates performative elements that transcend purely literary features and make it suitable for theatrical analysis. Jāmeʿ al-Ḥekāyāt is a collection of legends and tales compiled during the Safavid era. The version used in this study, edited by Pegāh Khadīsh and Mohammad Jaʿfarī (Qanavātī) based on manuscripts from the Astan Quds Razavi Library, is regarded as one of the most significant sources of folk and oral literature. The presence of an episodic structure, alienation techniques, the narrator’s direct intervention, the inclusion of poetry and song, and the embedding of secondary narratives within the main story make this work a rich subject for comparison with modern theatrical theories. While earlier analyses of such texts often relied on the Aristotelian model of theater, this article proposes a new approach to their dramatic examination through Bertolt Brecht’s theory of epic theater, using a descriptive-analytical method based on library sources. The findings show that many structural and narrative components, such as the alienation effect, nonlinear composition, active narrator, and multilayered storytelling, correspond to the principles of epic theater. The results can open new paths for comparative studies between Persian folk narratives and modern dramatic theories and provide a basis for adapting classical texts to localized dramatic performances.
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