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Languages with rich literary traditions

 Language Learning Forum : Books, Literature & Reading Post Reply
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Gilgamesh
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 Message 1 of 63
16 November 2007 at 3:56pm | IP Logged 
I just thought it would be very interesting to "rate" the body of literary works in different languages... That is, which language do have an extensive body of (ancient, modern) literature written, and which do not? I am saying this because I myself am interested in the literature of different languages, so it might be interesting for other people and me to know which languages can boast a long literary tradition with many works of great significance.
For starters, most 'big' Western European languages do.

It might also be nice if you could name the writers/poets that made this language a great literary language. And for extinct languages, it might be interesting to know whether many works have 'survived'.


For instance:

German - Goethe, Schiller, Eichendorff, Hesse, Mann
Dutch - Vondel, Hooft, Hermans, Mulisch, Reve
English - Chaucer, Shakespeare, Milton
French - Dumas, Maupassant, Flaubert, Zola
Russian - Pushkin, Dostoevsky, Tolstoy, Turgenjev


That's just for starters, obviously. I just named a few names that instantly sprung to my mind. It might be interesting though to obtain such a list for lesser known/less heard of languages as well as for languages farther away from home which I personally know very little about (Mandarin Chinese, Japanese, Korean, Malay, etc.).

I do hope people participate and we could make a list rating the 'richness' and/or availability of the literary output of many languages.

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bela_lugosi
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 Message 2 of 63
16 November 2007 at 7:14pm | IP Logged 
Other languages to add (Italian having undoubtedly the longest European tradition of literature):

Italian - Dante, Boccaccio, Petrarca, Tasso, Manzoni, Leopardi, Carducci, Pascoli, Eco
Spanish - De Cervantes, Neruda, Garcia Marquez, Borges
Finnish - Kivi, Aho, Waltari, Lönnrot
Estonian - Kreutzwald, Kallas, Liiv, Tammsaare, Kross
Icelandic - Sturluson (the famous saga writer), Laxness, PĂ©tursson, HallgrĂ­msson
Latin - Ennius, Plautus, Lucretius, Catullus, Cicero, Caesar, Vergil, Horace, Ovid, Seneca, Tacitus, Dante

Edited by bela_lugosi on 16 November 2007 at 7:19pm

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ElfoEscuro
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 Message 3 of 63
16 November 2007 at 7:15pm | IP Logged 
Japanese literature is very rich. Some of the earliest works include Kojiki & Nihonshoki.
Korean literature also is rich. Some of its earlier works include Samguk Yusa & Gyunyeojeon.
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LilleOSC
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 Message 4 of 63
16 November 2007 at 7:30pm | IP Logged 
How rich are Chinese and Arabic literatures?
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Gilgamesh
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 Message 5 of 63
16 November 2007 at 8:26pm | IP Logged 
bela_lugosi wrote:
Other languages to add (Italian having undoubtedly the longest European tradition of literature



I thought Greek held that position. Could anyone elaborate? Just in case, sorry for my ignorance...


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jankagan
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 Message 6 of 63
16 November 2007 at 11:47pm | IP Logged 
Chinese has one of the longest continuous traditions, spanning about 3000 years: Kongfuzi's (Confucius) Analects, Sunzi's (Sun Tzu Art of War, Sima Qian's Shiji, Tang dynasty poetry, Hong Lou Meng (Dream of the Red Chamber), and Xiyouji (Journey to the West) by Wu Chengren, all come to mind.

Greek literature goes further back than Italian's existance. The Odyssey, the Iliad, and Sappho are some of the classical.


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mabajsas
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 Message 7 of 63
17 November 2007 at 2:57am | IP Logged 
LilleOSC wrote:
How rich are Chinese and Arabic literatures?


I'm not sure, but I think Arabic has a rich literary tradition (the Quran). Doesn't One Thousand and One Nights include Arabic literature as well?
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Asiafeverr
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 Message 8 of 63
17 November 2007 at 3:32pm | IP Logged 
China is the world's oldest civilization, therefore I presume its literature is very rich culturally.

Edited by Asiafeverr on 17 November 2007 at 6:52pm



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