The Narrative Authority in the Arab Storytelling Heritage as Kalila and Dimna in Representation
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Abstract
Does narration (1) - how can it be - have authority? Does the narrator - as does the poet - have an advantage that distinguishes him from
about others? Why was the traditional narration associated with the fate of the narrator, with his existence? Let's see
Al-Harith influenced by Persian stories, and influential in the Quraish community during the Islamic call
The Messenger of God, may God’s prayers and peace be upon him, sheds his blood, then he is killed after the battle of Badr (2).
A story: ((There is salvation in it)) (3) as she put it. And Abu al-Fath al-Iskandari is researching
His existence - materially and socially - through deceit and deceit, and he justifies this by saying in the metaphor
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