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Saj'

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Saj‘(Arabic:سجع) is a form ofrhymed prosecharacterized by its end-rhyme,accent-basedmeter,and parallelism.[1]The parallelism could be of two types:iʿtidāl,meaning 'balance' or rhythmical parallelism, ormuwāzana,referring to quantitative metrical parallelism.[2]A single clause or phrase in saj' is can be called asajʿah(pl.sajʿāt), or afaṣl(fuṣūl), or afiqrah(pl.fiqar), or aqarīnah(pl.qarāʾin).[3]

Saj' may have been the oldest form of artistic speech inArabic,appearing already inpre-Islamic Arabia,[4][5]and appears to have been the preferred medium of communication of the pre-Islamickuhhān,i.e. thesoothsayers.[6]Saj' was also the dominant artistic speech inAbyssinia,both in the ecclesiastical poetry inGe'ezand OldAmharicfolk songs.[7]

Saj' is known to be used in Arabic literature, both sacred like in theQuran[8][9]and secular like in theOne Thousand and One Nights.[10]It can also be found in many instances of Persian literature, such as theGolestānofSaadi,written in 1258 CE. Saj' was occasionally adopted in attempts to mimic the style of the Quran.[11]

Definition

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According toDevin J. Stewart:[12]

In its simplest form,sajʿconsists of groups of consecutivecolasharing a common rhyme and meter.

Stewart has also offered a more elaborate definition.[13]

Sajʿ,though generally considered a sub-category of prose (nathr), is a type of composition distinct from both free prose (nathr mursal) and syllabic verse (naẓm). It consists of rhyming phrases termedsajaʿāt(singsajʿah). The rules governing the rhyme insajʿare slightly different from those governing the rhyme in theqaṣīdah,the most noticeable difference being that the rhyme-words insajʿgenerally end insukūn.Sajʿconforms to an accentual meter: eachsajʿahtends to have the same number of word-accents as its partnersajʿahs. Therefore, the fundamental unit ofsajʿprosody is the word,lafẓah(pl.Iafaẓāt), and not the syllable or thetafʿīlah.

Angelika Neuwirth has defined saj' as:[14]

short units rhyming in frequently changing sound patterns reiterating the last consonant and based on a common rhythm

Description

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In English, saj' is commonly just translated as "rhymed prose", but as a form of writing, involved additional rules (rarely explicated by Arab critics) beyond being that prose which rhymes.[4]Traditionally, saj' has been defined as prose (nathr,manthūr) divided into phrases or clauses, each of which end in a common rhyme. The basis of saj'prosodyis formed by the word rather than the syllable. As such, a mistaken or misunderstood way to describe saj' would be to try to describe it by a typical number of syllables per clause, as opposed to a typical number of words per clause.[15]Saj' has anaccentualmeter,meaning that its meter is defined by the number of stressed syllables per line.[16]The length of one clause or phrase (sajʿah) is equal or nearly equal in length to its partner clause, a property that has been called "balance" (iʿtidāl), and the number of words in a clause closely corresponds to its number of syntagmatic stresses (beats). Al-Bāqillānī defends the principle of balance in saj' against his interlocutors in the following manner:[17]

One part of what they callsajʿhas segment endings close to each other and segment cuts near each other. The other part is stretched so that its segments can be twice as long as the preceding ones and a segment can return to the original measure (wazn) only after plenty of words. Suchsajʿis not good and does not deserve to be praised. Someone might say: "When the balancedsajʿhas been stated, it ceases to besajʿat all. The speaker is not obliged to make all his speechsajʿ.He can say something insajʿ,then turn away from it, and then return to it once more. "Our reply is:" When one of the hemistichs of abaytis different from the other, it leads to disorder and imbalance. And it is exactly the same, when one of the hemistichs (miṣrāʿ) of asajʿutterance becomes disorganized and dissimilar to the other, as it also leads to imbalance. "We have shown that the Arabs blame any sajʿ which deviates from the balance of parts (ajzāʾ) so that some of its hemistichs are made of two words, and others of many words; they consider this weakness not eloquence.

Another common feature of saj' writing, also found in theQuran,is the presence of an introductory formula to the rest of the text that does not itself follow the ordinary structure of saj'. Thesajʿātproper begin after the introductory phrase.[18]In terms of length,Ibn al-Athirdistinguished between short saj', where each clause has between two and ten words, with long saj', where each clause has eleven or more words, without any set limit. Ibn al-Athir produces an example containing nineteen words per clause (Quran 8:43–44).Zakariya al-Qazwinisays that there are short, middle, and long forms of saj', but without specifying their boundaries, although unlike Ibn al-Athir, he does propose a limit to the number of words in long saj' (nineteen). ForAl-Qalqashandi,since the Quran represented the height of literary elegance, he recommended against composing saj' any longer than nineteen words, which is the longest example of saj' found in the Quran. Medieval critics also typically preferred shorter versions of saj'.[19]

In the Quran

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Overview

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The presence of saj' in the Quran has been a point of contention among Arabic literary critics, in large part tied to the potential implication that this characterization would have in conflating the Quran with human composition.[20]Most believed that the Quran contained a significant amount of saj'[21]or that the Quran, while it should not be described as saj' out of respect, has many of the formal features of saj'. Some theologians thought that some surahs were entirely written in saj', such asSurah 53( "The Star" ),Surah 54( "The Moon" ), andSurah 55( "The Merciful" ). The vast majority of examples of saj' found in Arabic manuals of rhetoric are derived from the Quran.[20]Though much of the Quran does fit the criteria of saj', not all of it does. The saj' form is largely present inMeccan surahs, as opposed toMedinan surahs (although late Meccan surahs already begin to depart from this style[22]). Meccan surahs contain monopartite verses, meaning that each verse is presented in one line. Medinans surahs, however, typically adopt bipartite verses, with two lines per verse, exceeding the constraints of shorter saj' phrases.[23]Furthermore, unlike Meccan surahs, Medinan surahs have greatly unbalanced lines (even while maintaining end-rhyme). As such, while 86% of lines in the Quran feature end-rhymes (series of lines where the final word rhymes), less of this is saj', as some of them lack rhythmical parallelism. Likewise, some lines containing rhythmical parallelism do not feature end-rhymes.[24]In one categorization, that of Ibn al-Athir, there are four main types of saj' in the Quran: equal saj' when both lines of a saj' unit are equal, unbalanced saj' when the second part of the saj' unit is longer than the first, short saj', and explicitly long saj'.[25]Stewart has classified five main structural patterns of saj' units in the Quran.[26]A more recent preliminary analysis, attempting to identify all categories of Quranic saj', has identified fifteen.[27]

Perspectives in tradition

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For Ibn Sinān al-Khafājī, the mode of Arabic in the Quran was consistent with existing custom and usage. On the other hand, those concerned with the doctrine ofQuranic inimitabilitybelieved that saying saj' could be found in the Quran would muddy the distinction between the speech of God and that of humans. For example,Al-Baqillani(d. 1013 AD) in a work of his entitledIʿjaz al-Qurʾān( "The Inimitability of the Quran" ), went to great lengths to dispute that any of the Quran could be described as saj'. For some, the Quran was not saj'per se,although it was similar to saj'. Others argued that one should withhold from referring to the Quran as saj' merely out of respect for the Quran. Some proponents of the presence of saj' in the Quran solved this problem by creating a distinction between divine and human saj'.[28]For example,Abu Hilal al-Askariargued:[29]

Qur'anic discourse which assumes the form ofsajʿandizdiwājis contrary to human discourse which assumes this form in its ability to convey the meaning, its clarity of expression, its sweetness and musicality.

In effect, al-Askari argued that unlike human saj', the Quran applies saj' and achieves the greatest possible elegance and meaning, even as it took on the literary limitations and formal constraints of saj'.[28]For Ibn al-Athir, most of the Quran was saj', and it was only the need to be concise that prevented all of it from being composed in saj'.[30]

The Arab critics also associated saj', to some extent, with the perceived nonsensical manner of speech attributed tosoothsayersanddiviners,which could not be associated withGodorMuhammad.In this instance, an oft-cited tradition was the hadith of the fetus, where Muhammad appears to condemn the use of saj' when one participant of two factions in the midst of settling a dispute before him makes rhetorical use of the technique.[28]According to some interpretations of this tradition, the condemnation was not on the use of saj' in general but was constrained to the use of saj' to rhetorically bolster an illegitimate point.[31]Other prophetic traditions figured in these debates, involving both prohibitions of the use of saj' in the domain of prayer or examples of Muhammad using saj' in prayer.[32]

See also

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References

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Citations

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  1. ^Stewart 2006,p. 476–477, 481.
  2. ^Stewart 2013,p. 25.
  3. ^Stewart 1990,p. 113.
  4. ^abStewart 1990,p. 101.
  5. ^Stewart 2013,p. 27.
  6. ^Stewart 2013,p. 22.
  7. ^Brockelmann 2017,p. 23.
  8. ^Stewart 1990,p. 108–109.
  9. ^Deroche 2022,p. 29.
  10. ^History of Muslim Philosophy,published by Pakistan Philosophical Congress online, Book 5, which is "A History of Muslim Philosophy: With Short Accounts of Other Disciplines and the Modern Renaissance in Muslim Lands" (1999)ISBN817536145X
  11. ^Sherman 2024,p. 59.
  12. ^Stewart 2006,p. 476.
  13. ^Stewart 1990,p. 132–133.
  14. ^Neuwirth 2006,p. 251.
  15. ^Stewart 1990,p. 111–116.
  16. ^Stewart 2013,p. 27–30.
  17. ^Frolov 2000,p. 115–117.
  18. ^Stewart 1990,p. 116–118.
  19. ^Stewart 1990,p. 118–120.
  20. ^abStewart 2006,p. 477.
  21. ^Stewart 1990,p. 133.
  22. ^Stewart 2013,p. 58.
  23. ^Neuwirth 2006,p. 251–252.
  24. ^Stewart 2006,p. 477–478.
  25. ^Klar 2021,p. 184–213.
  26. ^Stewart 2006,p. 479–480.
  27. ^Klar 2021,p. 223–225.
  28. ^abcStewart 1990,p. 102–107.
  29. ^Stewart 1990,p. 106.
  30. ^Klar 2021,p. 181.
  31. ^Stewart 2006b,p. 79.
  32. ^Stewart 2013,p. 23–24.

Sources

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Further reading

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