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344 pages, Paperback
First published January 1, 1997
The answer to the question how old is The Thousand and One Nights will depend, among many other things, on what one counts as the first version of the Nights. Should it be the Persian prototype, the Hazar Afsaneh? Or the ninth-century Thousand Nights, of which a few scrappy lines survive? Or The Thousand and One Nights, referred to in the twelfth century, but of which not even a few scrappy lines survive? Or the purely hypothetical thirteenth-century Syrian source manuscript? Or the Galland manuscript, which was written in either the fourteenth or the fifteenth century? Or the fuller versions of the Nights, translated by Lane and Burton, which were filled out with all sorts of ancient and recent stories (including ‘Sinbad’, ‘The Ebony Horse’, ‘Ali Baba’ and the rest) some time between the fifteenth and the early nineteenth centuries?
‘The wine of the fuqara’ (that is, of the poor before God, i.e. the Sufis) was one of the nicknames of hashish. In some of the less respectable Sufi groups, poetry was written in praise of hashish or opium.
But the tales are designed also to teach, and it is striking how many of the tales feature adulterous women, virtuous women, dominant women and wily women. From some of the tales Shahriyar may learn that there can be such a thing as fidelity in love and marriage. From other tales he may conclude that women are infinitely lustful and will deceive their husbands if they can, and he may derive a melancholy sort of consolation from this. Then again, after listening to yet other stories, he may simply laugh and conclude that sex is not such a serious matter anyway. The sheer diversity of the stories can be seen as providing a therapy of a kind.
The jinn (sing. jinn or genie) were thought of as supernatural creatures with bodies of flame. They were normally invisible. [...] There are good Muslim jinn, like Sakhr and his following, and there are evil, infidel jinn. (The evil jinn are sometimes characterized as shaytans, or devils.) [...] Some considered Iblis, the Devil, to be a jinn; some thought of him as an angel.40 (Angels are made of light, while jinn are made of fire.)