Dr. Nasrollah Pourjavady's Bio
Dr. Nasrollah Pourjavady
was born in Tehran and received his early
education there. He went to the United States at the end of 1962
to start his undergraduate education. After having obtained his
BA in 1967 in Western philosophy from San Francisco State
University, he returned to Iran and earned his MA and PhD
degrees in philosophy from the University of Tehran.
Subsequently he taught philosophy and mysticism at Sharif
University of Technology (then called Aryamehr) in Tehran, and
then at the University of Tehran, where he still teaches as a
full professor. He has also taught as a visiting professor at
Colgate University in New York State (2002), the Gregorian
University in Rome (2005), and the University of Maryland
(Spring and Summer 2008).
Over the last thirty years, Pourjavady has written some 30
books as well as over a hundred essays and articles in the
fields of Islamic mysticism, philosophy, and Persian literature.
These include: a critical edition of Ahmad Ghazzali's
Sawanih (1980) and its English translation (1986);
Ru'yat-e mah dar asman (La vision de Dieu en theologie et
mystique musulmane) (1996); Eshraq-o erfan (
Illuminationist Philosophy and Mysticism) (2001); Do
mojadded (2002), which is a study of two key figures in the
development of Islamic thought, Abu Hamid Ghazzali and
Fakhruddin Razi; Zaban-e hal (2007), a survey of Persian
literature from of the point of view of the usage of one
literary device; Bada-ye ‘eshq (2008), a study of the
meaning of wine as a metaphor in Persian poetry; and most
recently, introductions and notes to the Persian philosopher
Shehaboddin Sohravaradi’s allegorical works, translated into
Italian and published under the title of IL FRUSCIO DELLE ALI
DI GABRIELE, Racconti esoterici (Milano 2008).
Pourjavady was also the general editor
of a monumental, three-volume English language book on Iranian
art and culture, The Splendour of Iran (London 2001).
He has also edited and introduced the works of several lesser
known classical Iranian mystics and Persian poets, such as
Abu'l-Hasan Busti, Abu Mansur Esfahani, Mobarakshah Marvirudi,
Yar-Ali Tabrizi, and Awhad al-Din Razi.
As the founding-director of Iran University Press, the
largest academic publishing house in Iran after the Revolution,
he supervised the publication of some 1,200 academic books and
11 periodicals in Persian, English, French, and German for 24
years, until the spring of 2004. He personally edited two of
these journals, Nashr-e Danesh and Ma'aref. He
is a member of the Academy of Persian Language and Literature,
which awarded him the Academy's Persian Literature Award in
2004. He received an Alexander von Humboldt Research Award in
2005, and spent the year 2006 as a research scholar at the Free
University of Berlin. In the spring of 2008, Pourjavady taught a
semester at the University of Maryland, meanwhile giving talks
to a number of other universities and institutions in America.
His Persian book Do Mojadded was awarded as the book of
the year in Iran, and his Zaban-e hal received the 2008
International Society for Iranian Studies award for the best
book on Persian studies published in any language in the two
previous years.
Nasrollah Pourjavady has three sons, Amir Hosein, a musician and professor of music at the University of Tehran, Reza, who specializes in Islamic philosophy, and Ahmad, an undergraduate student. He also has two grandsons, Sohrab and Mehran.
