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<title>INTERTEXTUALITY IN ARABIC POETRY OF YORUBA AUTHORSHIP</title>
<link>http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/1900</link>
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<pubDate>Sat, 04 Apr 2026 14:28:36 GMT</pubDate>
<dc:date>2026-04-04T14:28:36Z</dc:date>
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<title>INTERTEXTUALITY IN ARABIC POETRY OF YORUBA AUTHORSHIP</title>
<link>http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/1901</link>
<description>INTERTEXTUALITY IN ARABIC POETRY OF YORUBA AUTHORSHIP
IBRAHIM, Sulaiman Algamawi
Intertextuality, a relational theory of textual surfaces, is one of the motifs that preoccupy Arabic&#13;
literary writing in Yorubaland. Existing literary studies of Arabic works of Yoruba authorship&#13;
focused mainly on syntax and rhetoric, with scant attention paid to intertextuality in their works.&#13;
This study was, therefore, designed to examine intertextuality in selected Arabic poetry of&#13;
Yoruba authorship, with a view to determining their literary sources and intertextual approaches.&#13;
Charles Bazerman and Muhammad Bennis‘s models of intertextuality served as the framework,&#13;
while the interpretive design was used. Fifteen poetry collections were purposively selected&#13;
based on their thematic relevance. These were Isa Alabi Abubakr’s (Ar-riyād and Assubāiyyah); Ali Mubaraq’s Bāqah Al-azhār (BA); Abdulrahman Abdul Aziz Az-zakawi’s Ma’&#13;
Al-qurān Min Sūrat an-Nās ilā Sūrat Al-A’alāh (MAMSA) and Al-aqyān fī Ahmiyah Ar-rihlah&#13;
wa Al-’ilm wa At-taknolajiyyah (AMRIT); Daud Adekilekun’s Tahniat Al-imām (TA), Rithā&#13;
Mūsa Abdul (RMA) and Madih Shaykh Ibrāhīm Niyas (MSIN); Nuh Ibrahim’s Mustaqbal&#13;
Abnāinā ila ayna ? (MABA); Abdulhafis bin Malik’s Hiwārun Hawla Qandom (HHQ) and Almagnātīs al-muhammadī (AAM); Abdulwahid Ariyibi’s Burdah al-‘Ajam (BAJ); Mashud AlOyowi’s Amlul mafqūd (AM); Tajudeen Al Umar’s Ashi’ār and Afis Oladosu’s Al-layl Al-abyad&#13;
(AA). The texts were subjected to literary analysis.&#13;
Four literary sources were identified: religious, historical, artistic and Yoruba traditional&#13;
sources. Religious sources project the Qur’an, Hadith and Sufi terms. The Qur’an and Hadith&#13;
were employed to reference admonition, stories of Prophets, good character, health management&#13;
and war strategy (Ar-riyād, BA, AA,). Sufi terms were deployed to denote praise and sadness&#13;
(MSIN and Ashi’ār). Historical sources concerned Muslim personalities (Ar-riyād and Assubāiyyah, BA, AAM, BAJ, Ashi’ār and AA). Artistic sources portrayed Arabic poems and&#13;
proverbs (TA, RMA, BA, AA, Ar-riyād and As-subāiyyah). Yoruba traditional sources reflected&#13;
admonition, simile, Oku pipe and proverbs (RMA, BA and Ar-riyād). The intertextual approaches&#13;
were three: deliberation, absorption and dialogism. Deliberation had four forms: iqtibās, tadmīn,&#13;
talmīh and ‘iqd. Iqtibās involved metaphor of Quran text (AA), comparison with Battle of Badr&#13;
(TA) and portrayal of Qur’an reciters (As-subāiyyah). Tadmīn involved interplay of poems of&#13;
Ahmad Shawqī (AMRIT), Ilyah Abu Madī (AA), Abu Al-‘Ala Al-mu’arī (Ar-riyād) and&#13;
Busayri’’s Burdah Al-madīh (BA). Talmīh reflected allusion to Noah’s Ark (As-subāiyyah),&#13;
Daud defeat of Jalut (Ar-riyād) and the virtuous woman in Khadijah, the wife of Prophet&#13;
Muhammad (AA). ‘Iqd portrayed the last hizb of the Qur’an (MAMSA) and muqābala in Hadith&#13;
(BA). Absorption underpinned hijāh (MABA), vicissitudes of life (BA) and kindness to the aged&#13;
(As-subāiyyah). Dialogism demonstrated mu’āradah of Burda al-madīh (BAJ), naqīdah (poem&#13;
of negation) of Qasīdah Qandonm (HHQ) and tarbī ‘(Quadrature poem) of Qasīdah&#13;
Abdulraman Ath-‘ālabi in (BA).&#13;
Arabic poetry of Yoruba authorship deploys different literary sources and intertextual&#13;
approaches.
</description>
<pubDate>Fri, 01 Sep 2023 00:00:00 GMT</pubDate>
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<dc:date>2023-09-01T00:00:00Z</dc:date>
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