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      • Hajji Baba begins and ends with fictional letters penned by Europeans which frame the narrative within. The premise is that Hajji Baba was a living individual who gifted his diary to a British traveler, who himself went on to translate and publish it.
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  2. Apr 10, 1998 · The real story of Hajji Baba | Times Higher Education (THE) Ottoman and Persian Odysseys. April 10, 1998. James Morier's The Adventures of Hajji Baba of Isfahan was first published in 1823 and at once became a bestseller.

  3. Mar 1, 2012 · An Orientalist project parexcellence, Hajji Baba lampoons Persians as rascals, cowards, puerile villains, and downright fools, depicting their culture as scandalously dishonest and decadent, and their society as violent. Morier’s satire, a bestseller in England and elsewhere, is an entertaining picaresque novel embellished with Orientalist ...

    • Introduction
    • Content and Context
    • The Edition Published by Richard Bentley
    • Introduction by Lord George Curzon
    • Introductions by Sir Walter Scott
    • Hajji Baba in Persia

    James Justinian Morier's novel The Adventures of Hajji Baba of Ispahan was first published in 1824 and remained popular well into the twentieth century. Despite Morier’s diplomatic career as a representative of Britain in Persia (present-day Iran) and his non-fiction travelogues which follow his journeys through the region, the fictional Hajji Baba...

    Hajji Baba begins and ends with fictional letters penned by Europeans which frame the narrative within. The premise is that Hajji Baba was a living individual who gifted his diary to a British traveler, who himself went on to translate and publish it. The narrative follows the eponymous Hajji Baba on his life adventures traveling throughout Persia....

    The edition published in London by Richard Bentley in 1835 -- the earliest edition of Hajji Baba on view in the exhibition -- was published eleven years after the novel's first release. Unlike later editions, it does not contain an introductory essay. However, it is the first example of an illustrated Hajji Baba, featuring on the title page two sma...

    According to some British intellectuals in the nineteenth century, Hajji Baba was vital reading for anyone who sought to understand Persian culture. The book was extremely popular in Britain and can be credited with popularizing certain notions about Persia which endured for many decades.4 The 1895 edition ofHajji Baba published by Macmillan and Co...

    A two-volume 1947 American edition of Hajji Baba, published by the Limited Editions Club of New York, features introductions by Sir Walter Scott and by E. G. Browne. The Limited Editions Club of New York was founded in 1929 and specialized in publishing high-quality and finely illustrated editions of classic books, which were sent to the Club's sub...

    Hajji Baba’s afterlife in Persia seemingly subverts the book’s Orientalist inclinations. The novel was translated into Persian in 1886 by Mirza Habib Isfahani (1835-1893), a renowned poet, Persian grammarian, and translator, and his version of Hajji Baba is considered a Persian classic which outshines the English original.17 In a surprising but con...

    • James Justinian Morier
    • 1824
  4. The Adventures of Hajji Baba of Ispahan is a satirical Oriental novel in English. It was written in 1824 by James Justinian Morier, a former British envoy who lived in Qajar Iran in 1808–1809 and 1810–1814, amidst the diplomatic difficulties that the country had with European nations. [1]

  5. Fact and Fiction: Morier's Haj ji Baba. james morier's picaresque novel, Hajji Baba of Ispahan, popular success throughout the nineteenth century to the English er's conviction that it must be true, at least partly, or that at. least it gave an accurate picture of Persia. Morier's contemporaries.

  6. The Adventures of Hajji Baba of Ispahan. James Justinian Morier (15 August 1782 – 19 March 1849) [a] was a British diplomat and author noted for his novels about the Qajar dynasty in Iran, most famously for the Hajji Baba series.

  7. HAJJI BABA OF ISPAHAN. Title of the first and most famous of four travel novels about Persia by an Englishman who had spent time there in the British diplomatic corps.. Hajji Baba of Ispahan (1824) by James Justinian Morier (c. 1780 – 1849) appealed to contemporary interest in things oriental and gave readers a satirical look into Persian society of the early Qajar period (the Qajar dynasty ...

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