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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 01 January 2022
The metrical requirements of Persian poetry are highly restrictive. Traditionally, the rigidity of the metrical system was compensated for by a high degree of flexibility in the poetic language in terms of lexicon, phonology, and morpho-syntax. Using statistical data from different periods of Persian poetry, this paper argues that the degree of flexibility of the language used in metrical Persian poetry has been in constant decrease, moving towards what may potentially be a language crisis for metrical Persian poetry. This study traces the linguistic and meta-linguistic origins of the initial flexibility of the poetic language and its subsequent change, suggesting that some of the recent trends in Persian poetry may be viewed in part as reactions to this potential crisis.
His research areas are quantitative metrics, early New Persian, and the phonology of Iranian languages.
The author would like to thank Raha Ahmadian as well as two anonymous reviewers of Iranian Studies for their valuable comments on an earlier version of this article.