Edward Said: A Legacy of Emancipation and RepresentationAdel Iskandar, Hakem Rustom "Edward Said was an intellectual with a passion for justice and he allowed nothing to deter him in its pursuit. Edward Said: A Legacy of Emancipation and Representation reflects this."—Archbishop Desmond Tutu "Edward Said was the great public intellectual in late 20th century United States of America. Yet the many dimensions of his genius have yet to be fully appreciated. This indispensable book is a grand response to this urgent need!"—Cornel West, Princeton University "Edward Said: Emancipation and Representation explores themes of aesthetics, identity, colonialism, Palestine, Israel, Zionism and intellectuals. Each section includes path-breaking new work in the growing field of Edward Said Studies. No other existing book deals with Said's work from so many varied perspectives."—Hamid Dabashi, Columbia University "These fine essays bring sympathetic yet critical attention to Said's remarkable range of contributions to politics and to the study of literature and culture. Reading them, one gets a vivid sense not merely of his ideas and his arguments but his vast yet unsentimental humanity."—Akeel Bilgrami, Columbia University "This remarkable volume helps to ensure that our conversation with Edward Said continues; all the articles in it draw their material or their inspiration from his work, and their diversity and richness are a testament to his extraordinary legacy."—Ahdaf Soueif, author of The Map of Love: A Novel, Booker Prize finalist "The very distinguished and diverse group of scholars who have contributed to this volume explore and illuminate the intellectual and political dimensions, and profound impact, of Edward W. Said's life and work. Their original and lively essays enrich our understanding of Said's writings, and the book as a whole is both testimony and tribute to the continuing importance, vitality and productivity of Said's legacy as a scholar, public intellectual, cultural critic and political activist."—Zachary Lockman, author of Contending Visions of the Middle East: the History and Politics of Orientalism "In this remarkable and important book, the authors interact with Edward Said in so many different ways that the reader is both amazed and out of breath. This book makes one think."—Immanuel Wallerstein, Yale University "This timely volume takes seriously the vast and challenging writings of Edward Said as they traverse the praxis of humanism, the literary contours of orientalism, and the intransigent and persistent critical of colonial power and the Palestinian struggle for freedom. A wide range of authors contest the the proper stance and trajectory of Said’s work, the ramifications of his work for literary studies, aesthetics, and politics, the status of humanism and secular criticism. They converge, however, in appreciating the passionate critique of colonial occupation and dispossession from the perspective of the displaced and the refugee. Taken together, these essays show how academic reflection can and must enter the public world at precisely those junctures that the border patrols of thought would shut down. They show that the critical responsibility of intellectuals consists in marshalling media for articulating loss and hope, insisting on a presence for those whose lives are threatened time and again with erasure. This is an important and rich volume that continues the critical task of Said in a plurivocal mode, establishing the unceasing intellectual force and fecundity of Said's work."—Judith Butler, University of California, Berkeley |
Contents
affiliating with edward said | 23 |
On Colony and Aesthetics | 51 |
e other is not Mute | 72 |
edward said and anthropology | 86 |
edward said and World Literature | 102 |
reading Postcolonial | 121 |
Locating edward said on ahdaf soueifs | 142 |
edward said and the Poetry of Decolonization | 159 |
a Personal reflection | 304 |
edward saids impact on PostZionist Critique in israel | 321 |
a Jewish Commentary in Memory | 354 |
The Intellectual at a Crossroads | 369 |
e Motif of exile in edward said | 389 |
saids Critique of Metaphysics | 414 |
edward said and the Possibilities of Humanism | 431 |
Memory aspiration | 448 |
edward saids Critique | 191 |
edward said and Polyphony | 204 |
Palestine Israel and Zionism | 227 |
on edward said and | 247 |
edward said and the Palestine Question | 280 |
Between Humanism and Late style | 462 |
edward saids Humanism | 490 |
List of contributors | 513 |
Other editions - View all
Edward Said: A Legacy of Emancipation and Representation Adel Iskandar,Adel Iskander,Hakem Rustom Limited preview - 2010 |
Common terms and phrases
adorno approach arab argued authority become beginning believe called colonial comparative concept connection continued course critical critique culture described discourse discussion dominant early east edward effect essay european example exile existence experience expression fact force humanism ibid idea identity imperialism important intellectual interest interview israel israeli issue Jewish Jews kind knowledge language late style later literary literature lives London Marxism means Middle movement never noted notion orientalism origins oslo Palestine Palestinian past peace perhaps political position possible postcolonial practice present Press production published question reading reality reflections relation represent representation resistance role said’s secular sense social society speak struggle studies suggests term theory things thought tion tradition translation understanding University Press voices West Western writing York Zionism