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  1. The most popular lyric genre of Urdu, a hybrid language developed from the interaction of Hindi and Persian, is the ghazal.
  2. Derived from the Arabic praise poem (qasidah), ghazal reflects on love—human, divine, and spiritual.
  3. Formal and thematic conventions are important to the ghazal tradition.
  4. Mirza Asadullah Khan, or Ghalib (Conqueror) as he is more commonly known, is considered the most important poet associated with this tradition.

Text:
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  1. The most popular lyric genre of Urdu, a hybrid language developed from the interaction of Hindi and Persian, is the ghazal. A reflective and introspective form of poetry known for its ability to speak eloquently about sadness and unfulfilled love, the ghazal is typically performed publicly during musha'irah, or poets' gatherings. While it is most popular among intellectual cultural circles in South Asia, it has also filtered into the popular imagination through musical sequences in Hindi cinema.
  2. Derived from the Arabic praise poem (qasidah), the ghazal reflects on love—human, divine, and spiritual. The idealized "beloved" in the ghazal tradition is typically a woman, or God. The use of masculine grammatical structures suggests that many poems carry homoerotic undertones. The ghazal rarely speaks about specific encounters; rather, it conceives of love as a metaphor for interactions among humans, God, and the world.
  3. Formal and thematic conventions are important to the ghazal tradition. Poems typically contain three to seven couplets (she'r), each of which focuses on distinct thoughts, images, or moods. Each couplet is linked by a rhyme scheme (qafiyah) in which a syllable or sounds appears in both lines of the first couplet as well as the second line of the following couplets. A refrain (radif) follows at the end of the couplet, and the final couplet features the poet's name, or signatory phrase (takhallus)
  4. During the Mughal era, Mir, Sauda, and Momin became associated with the ghazal tradition. Mirza Asadullah Khan, or Ghalib (Conqueror) as he is more commonly known, is considered the most important poet associated with this tradition. Under the patronage of Bahadur Shah, the last Mughal "emperor," Ghalib produced a Persian prose history of the Mughals that traced their lineage back to Central Asia. Following the death of his rival, Zauq, Ghalib became the official tutor of Bahadur Shah. Renowned for the aesthetic beauty of his poetry, Ghalib also reflected on the intense colonial politics of the day. Writing during the time of the Indian mutiny of 1857, a bloody event that consolidated British rule over India and that also caused many poets to leave the capital, Delhi, for more provincial areas, Ghalib's work speaks to the public pain experienced by Indians as well as to his own personal suffering.
 
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