Английская Википедия:Edward Said
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Edward Wadie SaidШаблон:Efn (1 November 1935 – 24 September 2003) was a Palestinian-American academic, literary critic and political activist.[1] As a professor of literature at Columbia University, he was among the founders of post-colonial studies.[2] As a cultural critic, Said is best known for his book Orientalism (1978), a foundational text which critiques the cultural representations that are the bases of Orientalism—how the Western world perceives the Orient.[3][4][5][6] His model of textual analysis transformed the academic discourse of researchers in literary theory, literary criticism, and Middle Eastern studies.[7][8][9][10]
Born in Jerusalem, Mandatory Palestine, Said was a United States citizen by way of his father, who had served in the United States Army during World War I. After the 1948 Palestine war, he relocated to Egypt and then to the United States, enrolling at Victoria College and Northfield Mount Hermon School, respectively. He graduated with a BA in English from Princeton University in 1957, and later with an MA (1960) and a PhD (1964) in English Literature from Harvard University.[1] His principal influences were Antonio Gramsci, Frantz Fanon, Aimé Césaire, Michel Foucault, and Theodor W. Adorno.[10] In 1963, Said joined Columbia University as a member of the English and Comparative Literature faculties, where he taught and worked until 2003. He lectured at more than 200 other universities in North America, Europe, and the Middle East.[11]
As a public intellectual, Said was a member of the Palestinian National Council supporting a two-state solution that incorporated the Palestinian right of return, before resigning in 1993 due to his criticism of the Oslo Accords.[12][13] He advocated for the establishment of a Palestinian state to ensure political and humanitarian equality in the Israeli-occupied territories, where Palestinians have witnessed the increased expansion of Israeli settlements. However, in 1999, he argued that sustainable peace was only possible with one Israeli–Palestinian state.[14] He defined his oppositional relation with the Israeli status quo as the remit of the public intellectual who has "to sift, to judge, to criticize, to choose, so that choice and agency return to the individual" man and woman.
In 1999, Said and Argentine-Israeli conductor Daniel Barenboim co-founded the West–Eastern Divan Orchestra, which is based in Seville, Spain. Said was also an accomplished pianist, and, with Barenboim, co-authored the book Parallels and Paradoxes: Explorations in Music and Society (2002), a compilation of their conversations and public discussions about music at Carnegie Hall in New York City.[15]
Life and career
Early life
Said was born on 1 November 1935[16] into a family of Palestinian Christians in the city of Jerusalem, at the time under the British Mandate for Palestine.[17] His parents were born in the Ottoman Empire: his mother Hilda Said (née Musa) was half Palestinian and half Lebanese, and was raised in the city of Nazareth; and his father Wadie "William" Said was a Jerusalem-based Palestinian businessman.[18][19] Both Hilda and Wadie were Arab Christians, adhering to Protestantism.[20][21] During World War I, Wadie served in the American Expeditionary Forces, subsequently earning United States citizenship for himself and his immediate family.[22][23][24]
In 1919, Wadie and his cousin established a stationery business in Cairo, Egypt.[19]Шаблон:Rp
Although he was raised Protestant, Said became an agnostic in his later years.[25][26][27][28][29]
Education
Said's childhood was split between Jerusalem and Cairo: he was enrolled in Jerusalem's St. George's School, a British boys' school run by the local Anglican Diocese, but stopped going to his classes when growing intercommunal violence between Palestinian Arabs and Palestinian Jews made it too dangerous for him to continue attending, prompting his family to leave Jerusalem at the onset of the 1947–1949 Palestine War.[30] By the late 1940s, Said was in Alexandria, enrolled at the Egyptian branch of Victoria College, where "classmates included Hussein of Jordan, and the Egyptian, Syrian, Jordanian, and Saudi Arabian boys whose academic careers would progress to their becoming ministers, prime ministers, and leading businessmen in their respective countries."[19]Шаблон:Rp However, he was expelled in 1951 for troublesome behaviour, though his academic performance was high. Having relocated to the United States, Said attended Northfield Mount Hermon School in Massachusetts—a socially élite, college-prep boarding school where he struggled with social alienation for a year. Nonetheless, he continued to excel academically and achieved the rank of either first (valedictorian) or second (salutatorian) out of a class of 160 students.[31]
In retrospect, he viewed being sent far from the Middle East as a parental decision much influenced by "the prospects of deracinated people, like us the Palestinians, being so uncertain that it would be best to send me as far away as possible."[31] The realities of peripatetic life—of interwoven cultures, of feeling out of place, and of homesickness—so affected the schoolboy Edward that themes of dissonance feature in the work and worldview of the academic Said.[31] At school's end, he had become Edward W. Said—a polyglot intellectual (fluent in English, French, and Arabic). He graduated with an A.B. in English from Princeton University in 1957 after completing a senior thesis titled "The Moral Vision: André Gide and Graham Greene."[32] He later received Master of Arts (1960) and Doctor of Philosophy (1964) degrees in English Literature from Harvard University.[19]Шаблон:Rp[1]
Career
In 1963, Said joined Columbia University as a member of the English and Comparative Literature faculties, where he taught and worked until 2003. In 1974, he was Visiting Professor of Comparative Literature at Harvard; during the 1975–76 period, he was a Fellow of the Center for Advanced Study in Behavioral Science, at Stanford University. In 1977, he became the Parr Professor of English and Comparative Literature at Columbia University, and subsequently was the Old Dominion Foundation Professor in the Humanities; and in 1979 was Visiting Professor of Humanities at Johns Hopkins University.[33]
Said also worked as a visiting professor at Yale University, and lectured at more than 200 other universities in North America, Europe, and the Middle East.[11][34] In 1992, Said was promoted to full professor.[35] Editorially, Said served as president of the Modern Language Association, as editor of the Arab Studies Quarterly in the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, on the executive board of International PEN, and was a member of the American Academy of Arts and Letters, the Royal Society of Literature, the Council of Foreign Relations,[33] and the American Philosophical Society.[36] In 1993, Said presented the BBC's annual Reith Lectures, a six-lecture series titled Representation of the Intellectual, wherein he examined the role of the public intellectual in contemporary society, which the BBC published in 2011.[37]
In his work, Said frequently researches the term and concept of the cultural archive, especially in his book Culture and Imperialism (1993). He states the cultural archive is a major site where investments in imperial conquest are developed, and that these archives include "narratives, histories, and travel tales."[38] Said emphasizes the role of the Western imperial project in the disruption of cultural archives, and theorizes that disciplines such as comparative literature, English, and anthropology can be directly linked to the concept of empire.
Literary productions
Said's first published book, Joseph Conrad and the Fiction of Autobiography (1966), was an expansion of the doctoral dissertation he presented to earn the PhD degree. Abdirahman Hussein said in Edward Saïd: Criticism and Society (2010), that Conrad's novella Heart of Darkness (1899) was "foundational to Said's entire career and project".[39][40] In Beginnings: Intention and Method (1974), Said analyzed the theoretical bases of literary criticism by drawing on the insights of Vico, Valéry, Nietzsche, de Saussure, Lévi-Strauss, Husserl, and Foucault.[41] Said's later works included
- The World, the Text, and the Critic (1983),
- Nationalism, Colonialism, and Literature: Yeats and Decolonization (1988),
- Culture and Imperialism (1993),
- Representations of the Intellectual: The 1993 Reith Lectures (1994),
- Humanism and Democratic Criticism (2004), and
- On Late Style (2006).
Orientalism
Шаблон:Main Said became an established cultural critic with the book Orientalism (1978), a critique of Orientalism as the source of the false cultural representations in western-eastern relations. The thesis of Orientalism proposes the existence of a "subtle and persistent Eurocentric prejudice against Arabo–Islamic peoples and their culture",[42] which originates from Western culture's long tradition of false, romanticized images of Asia, in general, and the Middle East in particular. Said wrote that such cultural representations have served as implicit justifications for the colonial and imperial ambitions of the European powers and of the U.S. Likewise, Said denounced the political and the cultural malpractices of the régimes of the ruling Arab élites who he felt internalized the false and romanticized representations of Arabic culture that were created by Anglo–American Orientalists.[42]
Orientalism proposed that much Western study of Islamic civilization was political intellectualism, meant for the self-affirmation of European identity, rather than objective academic study; thus, the academic field of Oriental studies functioned as a practical method of cultural discrimination and imperialist domination—that is to say, the Western Orientalist knows more about "the Orient" than do "the Orientals."[42][43]Шаблон:Rp
Western Art, Orientalism continues, has misrepresented the Orient with stereotypes since Antiquity, as in the tragedy The Persians (472 BCE), by Aeschylus, where the Greek protagonist falls because he misperceived the true nature of The Orient.[43]Шаблон:Rp The European political domination of Asia has biased even the most outwardly objective Western texts about The Orient, to a degree unrecognized by the Western scholars who appropriated for themselves the production of cultural knowledge—the academic work of studying, exploring, and interpreting the languages, histories, and peoples of Asia. Therefore, Orientalist scholarship implies that the colonial subaltern (the colonised people) were incapable of thinking, acting, or speaking for themselves, thus are incapable of writing their own national histories. In such imperial circumstances, the Orientalist scholars of the West wrote the history of the Orient—and so constructed the modern, cultural identities of Asia—from the perspective that the West is the cultural standard to emulate, the norm from which the "exotic and inscrutable" Orientals deviate.[43]Шаблон:Rp
Criticism of Orientalism
Orientalism provoked much professional and personal criticism for Said among academics.[44] Traditional Orientalists, such as Albert Hourani, Robert Graham Irwin, Nikki Keddie, Bernard Lewis, and Kanan Makiya, suffered negative consequences, because Orientalism affected public perception of their intellectual integrity and the quality of their Orientalist scholarship.[45][46][48] The historian Keddie said that Said's critical work about the field of Orientalism had caused, in their academic disciplines:
In Orientalism, Said described Bernard Lewis, the Anglo–American Orientalist, as "a perfect exemplification [of an] Establishment Orientalist [whose work] purports to be objective, liberal scholarship, but is, in reality, very close to being propaganda against his subject material."[43]Шаблон:Rp
Lewis responded with a harsh critique of Orientalism accusing Said of politicizing the scientific study of the Middle East (and Arabic studies in particular); neglecting to critique the scholarly findings of the Orientalists; and giving "free rein" to his biases.[49]
Said retorted that in The Muslim Discovery of Europe (1982), Lewis responded to his thesis with the claim that the Western quest for knowledge about other societies was unique in its display of disinterested curiosity, which Muslims did not reciprocate towards Europe. Lewis was saying that "knowledge about Europe [was] the only acceptable criterion for true knowledge." The appearance of academic impartiality was part of Lewis's role as an academic authority for zealous "anti–Islamic, anti–Arab, Zionist, and Cold War crusades."[43]Шаблон:Rp[50] Moreover, in the Afterword to the 1995 edition of the book, Said replied to Lewis's criticisms of the first edition of Orientalism (1978).[50][43]Шаблон:Rp
Influence of Orientalism
In the academy, Orientalism became a foundational text of the field of post-colonial studies, for what the British intellectual Terry Eagleton said is the book's "central truth ... that demeaning images of the East, and imperialist incursions into its terrain, have historically gone hand in hand."[51]
Both Said's supporters and his critics acknowledge the transformative influence of Orientalism upon scholarship in the humanities; critics say that the thesis is an intellectually limiting influence upon scholars, whilst supporters say that the thesis is intellectually liberating.[52][53] The fields of post-colonial and cultural studies attempt to explain the "post-colonial world, its peoples, and their discontents",[2][54] for which the techniques of investigation and efficacy in Orientalism, proved especially applicable in Middle Eastern studies.[7]
As such, the investigation and analysis Said applied in Orientalism proved especially practical in literary criticism and cultural studies,[7] such as the post-colonial histories of India by Gyan Prakash,[55] Nicholas Dirks[56] and Ronald Inden,[57] modern Cambodia by Simon Springer,[58] and the literary theories of Homi K. Bhabha,[59] Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak[60] and Hamid Dabashi (Iran: A People Interrupted, 2007).
In Eastern Europe, Milica Bakić–Hayden developed the concept of Nesting Orientalisms (1992), derived from the ideas of the historian Larry Wolff (Inventing Eastern Europe: The Map of Civilization on the Mind of the Enlightenment, 1994) and Said's ideas in Orientalism (1978).[61] The Bulgarian historian Maria Todorova (Imagining the Balkans, 1997) presented the ethnologic concept of Nesting Balkanisms (Ethnologia Balkanica, 1997), which is derived from Milica Bakić–Hayden's concept of Nesting Orientalisms.[62]
In The Impact of "Biblical Orientalism" in Late Nineteenth- and Early Twentieth-Century Palestine (2014), the historian Lorenzo Kamel, presented the concept of "Biblical Orientalism" with an historical analysis of the simplifications of the complex, local Palestinian reality, which occurred from the 1830s until the early 20th century.[63] Kamel said that the selective usage and simplification of religion, in approaching the place known as "The Holy Land", created a view that, as a place, the Holy Land has no human history other than as the place where Bible stories occurred, rather than as Palestine, a country inhabited by many peoples.
The post-colonial discourse presented in Orientalism, also influenced post-colonial theology and post-colonial biblical criticism, by which method the analytical reader approaches a scripture from the perspective of a colonial reader.[64] Another book in this area is Postcolonial Theory (1998), by Leela Gandhi, explains Post-colonialism in terms of how it can be applied to the wider philosophical and intellectual context of history.[65]
Political activities
Arab–Israeli conflict
In 1967, consequent to the Six-Day War, Said became a public intellectual when he acted politically to counter the stereotyped misrepresentations (factual, historical, cultural) with which American news media explained the Arab–Israeli conflict; reportage divorced from the historical realities of the Middle East, in general, and from Israel and the Palestinian territories, in particular. To address, explain, and correct such perceived orientalism, Said published "The Arab Portrayed" (1968), a descriptive essay about images of "the Arab" that are meant to evade specific discussion of the historical and cultural realities of the peoples represented in the Middle East, featured in journalism (print, photograph, television) and some types of scholarship (specialist journals).[66]
Views on Zionism
In the essay "Zionism from the Standpoint of Its Victims" (1979), Said argued in favour of the political legitimacy and philosophical authenticity of the claims and right to a Jewish homeland, while also asserting the simultaneously inherent right of national self-determination for the Palestinian people.[67] He also characterized Israel's founding as it happened, the displacement of the Palestinian Arabs that accompanied it, and the subjugation of the Palestinians in the Israeli-occupied territories as a manifestation of Western-style imperialism. His books on this topic include The Question of Palestine (1979), The Politics of Dispossession (1994), and The End of the Peace Process (2000).
During a lecture conference at the University of Washington in 2003, Said affirmed that Israeli Jews had grounds for a territorial claim to Palestine (or the Land of Israel), but maintained that it was not "the only claim or the main claim" vis-à-vis all of the other ethnic groups (including Jews and Arabs) who have inhabited the region throughout human history:
Said's argument against the Religious Zionism traditionally espoused by Jewish fundamentalists (i.e., citing God to project the Jewish/Israeli claim as superior to the Arab/Palestinian claim) asserted that such justifications were inherently irrational because they would, among other factors, enable Christians and Muslims of all ethnic and cultural backgrounds to lay superseding territorial claims to Palestine on the basis of their faith.
Palestinian National Council
From 1977 until 1991, Said was an independent member of the Palestinian National Council (PNC).[68] In 1988, he was a proponent of the two-state solution to the Israeli–Palestinian conflict, and voted for the establishment of the State of Palestine at a meeting of the PNC in Algiers. In 1993, Said quit his membership in the Palestinian National Council, to protest the internal politics that led to the signing of the Oslo Accords (Declaration of Principles on Interim Self-Government Arrangements, 1993), which he thought had unacceptable terms, and because the terms had been rejected by the Madrid Conference of 1991.
Said disliked the Oslo Accords for not producing an independent State of Palestine, and because they were politically inferior to a plan that Yasir Arafat had rejected—a plan Said had presented to Arafat on behalf of the U.S. government in the late 1970s.[69] Especially troublesome to Said was his belief that Yasir Arafat had betrayed the right of return of the Palestinian refugees to their houses and properties in the Green Line territories of pre-1967 Israel, and that Arafat ignored the growing political threat of the Israeli settlements in the occupied territories that had been established since the conquest of Palestine in 1967.
In 1995, in response to Said's political criticisms, the Palestinian Authority (PA) banned the sale of Said's books; however, the PA lifted the book ban when Said publicly praised Yasir Arafat for rejecting Prime Minister Ehud Barak's offers at the Middle East Peace Summit at Camp David (2000) in the U.S.[70][71]
In the mid-1990s, Said wrote the foreword to the history book Jewish History, Jewish Religion: The Weight of Three Thousand Years (1994), by Israel Shahak, about Jewish fundamentalism, which presents the cultural proposition that Israel's mistreatment of the Palestinians is rooted in a Judaic requirement (of permission) for Jews to commit crimes, including murder, against Gentiles (non-Jews). In his foreword, Said said that Jewish History, Jewish Religion is "nothing less than a concise history of classic and modern Judaism, insofar as these are relevant to the understanding of modern Israel"; and praised the historian Shahak for describing contemporary Israel as a nation subsumed in a "Judeo–Nazi" cultural ambiance that allowed the dehumanization of the Palestinian Other:[72]
In 1998, Said made In Search of Palestine (1998), a BBC documentary film about Palestine, past and present. In the company of his son, Wadie, Said revisited the places of his boyhood, and confronted injustices meted out to ordinary Palestinians in the contemporary West Bank. Despite the social and cultural prestige afforded to BBC cinema products in the U.S., the documentary was never broadcast by any American television company.[73][74]
Lebanon stone-throwing incident
On 3 July 2000, whilst touring the Middle East with his son, Wadie, Said was photographed throwing a stone across the Blue Line Lebanese–Israel border, which image elicited much political criticism about his action demonstrating an inherent, personal sympathy with terrorism; and, in Commentary magazine, the journalist Edward Alexander labelled Said as "The Professor of Terror", for aggression against Israel.[75] Said explained the stone-throwing as a two-fold action, personal and political; a man-to-man contest-of-skill, between a father and his son, and an Arab man's gesture of joy at the end of the Israeli occupation of southern Lebanon (1985–2000): "It was a pebble; there was nobody there. The guardhouse was at least half a mile away."[76]
Despite having denied that he aimed the stone at an Israeli guardhouse, the Beirut newspaper As-Safir (The Ambassador) reported that a Lebanese local resident reported that Said was at less than ten metres (ca. 30 ft.) distance from the Israeli Defense Force (IDF) soldiers manning the two-storey guardhouse, when Said aimed and threw the stone over the border fence; the stone's projectile path was thwarted when it struck the barbed wire atop the border fence.[77] Nonetheless, in the U.S., despite a political fracas by students at Columbia University and the Anti-Defamation League of B'nai B'rith International (Sons of the Covenant), the university provost published a five-page letter defending Said's action as an academic's freedom of expression: "To my knowledge, the stone was directed at no-one; no law was broken; no indictment was made; no criminal or civil action has been taken against Professor Saïd."[78]
Nevertheless, Said endured political repercussions, such as the cancellation of an invitation to give a lecture to the Freud Society, in Austria, in February 2001.[79] The President of the Freud Society justified withdrawing the invitation by explaining to Said that "the political situation in the Middle East, and its consequences" had rendered an accusation of anti-Semitism a very serious matter, and that any such accusation "has become more dangerous" in the politics of Austria; thus, the Freud Society cancelled its invitation to Said in order to "avoid an internal clash" of opinions, about him, that might ideologically divide the Freud Society.[76]
Criticism of U.S. foreign policy
In the revised edition of Covering Islam: How the Media and the Experts Determine How We See the Rest of the World (1997), Said criticized the Orientalist bias of the Western news media's reportage about the Middle East and Islam, especially the tendency to editorialize "speculations about the latest conspiracy to blow up buildings, sabotage commercial airliners, and poison water supplies."[80] He criticized the American military involvement in the Kosovo War (1998–99) as an imperial action; and described the Iraq Liberation Act (1998), promulgated during the Clinton Administration, as the political license that predisposed the U.S. to invade Iraq in 2003, which was authorised with the Iraq Resolution (2 October 2002); and the continual support of Israel by successive U.S. presidential governments, as actions meant to perpetuate regional political instability in the Middle East.[15]
In the event, despite being sick with leukemia, as a public intellectual, Said continued criticising the U.S. Invasion of Iraq in mid-2003;[81] and, in the Egyptian Al-Ahram Weekly newspaper, in the article "Resources of Hope" (2 April 2003), Said said that the U.S. war against Iraq was a politically ill-conceived military enterprise.[82]
Under FBI surveillance
In 2003, Haidar Abdel-Shafi, Ibrahim Dakak, Mustafa Barghouti, and Said established Al-Mubadara (the Palestinian National Initiative), headed by Barghouti, a third-party reformist, democratic party meant to be an alternative to the usual two-party politics of Palestine. Its ideology is to be an alternative to the extremist politics of the social-democratic Fatah and the Islamist Hamas. Said's founding of the group, as well as his other international political activities concerning Palestine, were noticed by the U.S. government, and Said came under FBI surveillance, which became more intensive after 1972. David Price, an anthropologist at Evergreen State College, requested the FBI file on Said through the Freedom of Information Act on behalf of CounterPunch and published a report there on his findings.[83] The released pages of Said's FBI files show that the FBI read Said's books and reported on their contents to Washington.[84]Шаблон:Rp[85]
Musical interests
Besides having been a public intellectual, Edward Said was an accomplished pianist, worked as the music critic for The Nation magazine, and wrote four books about music: Musical Elaborations (1991); Parallels and Paradoxes: Explorations in Music and Society (2002), with Daniel Barenboim as co-author; On Late Style: Music and Literature Against the Grain (2006); and Music at the Limits (2007) in which final book he spoke of finding musical reflections of his literary and historical ideas in bold compositions and strong performances.[86][87]
Elsewhere in the musical world, the composer Mohammed Fairouz acknowledged the deep influence of Edward Said upon his works; compositionally, Fairouz's First Symphony thematically alludes to the essay "Homage to a Belly-Dancer" (1990), about Tahia Carioca, the Egyptian dancer, actress, and political militant; and a piano sonata, titled Reflections on Exile (1984), which thematically refers to the emotions inherent to being an exile.[88][89][90]
West–Eastern Divan Orchestra
In 1999, Said and Barenboim co-founded the West-Eastern Divan Orchestra, composed of young Israeli, Palestinian, and Arab musicians. They also established The Barenboim–Said Foundation in Seville, to develop education-through-music projects. Besides managing the West–Eastern Divan Orchestra, the Barenboim–Said Foundation assists with the administration of the Academy of Orchestral Studies, the Musical Education in Palestine Project, and the Early Childhood Musical Education Project, in Seville.[91]
Honors and awards
Besides honors, memberships, and postings to prestigious organizations worldwide, Edward Said was awarded some twenty honorary university degrees in the course of his professional life as an academic, critic, and Man of Letters.[92] Among the honors bestowed to him were:
- the Bowdoin Prize by Harvard University.
- He twice received the Lionel Trilling Book Award; the first occasion was the inaugural bestowing of said literary award in 1976, for Beginnings: Intention and Method (1974). He also received the
- Wellek Prize of the American Comparative Literature Association
- The inaugural Spinoza Lens Prize.[93]
- Lannan Literary Award for Lifetime Achievement in 2001
- Prince of Asturias Award for Concord in 2002 (shared with Daniel Barenboim).
- First U.S. citizen to receive the Sultan Owais Prize (for Cultural & Scientific Achievements, 1996–1997).[94]
- The autobiography Out of Place (1999)[19] was bestowed three awards, the 1999 New Yorker Book Award for Non-Fiction; the 2000 Anisfield-Wolf Book Award for Non-Fiction; and the Morton Dauwen Zabel Award in Literature.[95]
Death and legacy
On 24 September 2003, after enduring a 12-year sickness with chronic lymphocytic leukemia, Said died, at 67 years of age, in New York City.[12] He is survived by his wife, Mariam C. Said,[96] his son, Wadie Said, and his daughter, Najla Said.[97][98][99] The eulogists included Alexander Cockburn ("A Mighty and Passionate Heart");[100] Seamus Deane ("A Late Style of Humanism");[101] Christopher Hitchens ("A Valediction for Edward Said");[102] Tony Judt ("The Rootless Cosmopolitan");[103] Michael Wood ("On Edward Said");[104] and Tariq Ali ("Remembering Edward Said, 1935–2003").[105] Said is buried in the Protestant Cemetery in Broumana, Jabal Lubnan, Lebanon.[106][107][108] His headstone indicates he died on 25 September 2003.
In November 2004, in Palestine, Birzeit University renamed their music school the Edward Said National Conservatory of Music.[109]
The tributes to Said include books and schools; such as Waiting for the Barbarians: A Tribute to Edward W. Said (2008) features essays by Akeel Bilgrami, Rashid Khalidi, and Elias Khoury;[110][111] Edward Said: The Charisma of Criticism (2010), by Harold Aram Veeser, a critical biography; and Edward Said: A Legacy of Emancipation and Representations (2010), essays by Joseph Massad, Ilan Pappé, Ella Shohat, Ghada Karmi, Noam Chomsky, Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak, and Daniel Barenboim. The Barenboim–Said Academy (Berlin) was established in 2012.
In 2002, Sheikh Zayed bin Sultan Al Nayhan, the founder and president of the United Arab Emirates, and others endowed the Edward Said Chair at Columbia University; it is currently filled by Rashid Khalidi.[112][113]
In 2016, California State University, Fresno started examining applicants for a newly created Professorship in Middle East Studies named after Edward Said, but after months of examining applicants, Fresno State canceled the search. Some observers claim that the cancellation was due to pressure from pro-Israeli individuals and groups.[114]
References
Notes
Citations
Sources
- Шаблон:Cite book
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Further reading
- Brennan, Timothy. Places of Mind: A Life of Edward Said (2021). online review
- Kennedy, Valerie. Edward Said: A Critical Introduction. Key Contemporary Thinkers. Malden, MA: Wiley-Blackwell, 2000.
- McCarthy, Conor. The Cambridge Introduction to Edward Said. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2010.
- Шаблон:Cite book Шаблон:Google books.
- Rubin, Andrew N. ed. Humanism, Freedom, and the Critic: Edward W. Said and After. Washington, D.C.: Georgetown University Press, 2005.
- Said, Edward W. Moustafa Bayoumi, et al. The Selected Works of Edward Said, 1966 – 2006 (2019) excerpt
External links
- Edward Said, 2000: My Encounter with Sartre, London Review of Books
- Шаблон:IMDb name
- Review of Reflections on Exile and Other Essays and Edward Said: The Last Interview, in Other Voices, vol. 3, no. 1.
- Шаблон:OL author
- Шаблон:C-SPAN
- Finding aid to Edward Said papers at Columbia University – Rare Book & Manuscript Library
Шаблон:Social and political philosophy Шаблон:Prince of Asturias Award for Concord Шаблон:American Book Awards Шаблон:Subject bar Шаблон:Authority control
- ↑ 1,0 1,1 1,2 Шаблон:Cite encyclopedia
- ↑ 2,0 2,1 Robert Young, White Mythologies: Writing History and the West, New York & London: Routledge, 1990.
- ↑ Шаблон:Cite book
- ↑ Шаблон:Citation
- ↑ Шаблон:Cite book
- ↑ Шаблон:Cite book
- ↑ 7,0 7,1 7,2 Stephen Howe, "Dangerous mind?", New Humanist, Vol. 123, November/December 2008.
- ↑ "Between Worlds", Reflections on Exile, and Other Essays (2002) pp. 561, 565.
- ↑ Шаблон:Cite encyclopedia
- ↑ 10,0 10,1 Шаблон:Cite encyclopedia
- ↑ 11,0 11,1 Dr. Farooq, Study Resource Page Шаблон:Webarchive, Global Web Post, accessed on 3 January 2010.
- ↑ 12,0 12,1 Шаблон:Cite news
- ↑ Andrew N. Rubin,"Edward W. Said", Arab Studies Quarterly, Fall 2004: p. 1. Accessed 5 January 2010.
- ↑ Шаблон:Cite news
- ↑ 15,0 15,1 Democracy Now!, "Edward Saïd Archive" Шаблон:Webarchive, DemocracyNow.org, 2003. Accessed 4 January 2010.
- ↑ Шаблон:Cite book
- ↑ Шаблон:Cite magazine
- ↑ Шаблон:Cite web
- ↑ 19,0 19,1 19,2 19,3 19,4 Шаблон:Cite book
- ↑ Edward Said: 'Out of Place' 14 November 2018, Aljazeera.com. Accessed 7 February 2019
- ↑ Edward Wadie Said a political activist literary critic 27 September 2003, The Independent. Accessed 7 February 2019
- ↑ Шаблон:Cite web
- ↑ Ihab Shalback, 'Edward Said and the Palestinian Experience,' in Joseph Pugliese (ed.) Transmediterranean: Diasporas, Histories, Geopolitical Spaces, Peter Lang, 2010, pp. 71–83
- ↑ Шаблон:Cite web
- ↑ Шаблон:Cite book
- ↑ Шаблон:Cite book
- ↑ Шаблон:Cite book
- ↑ Amritjit Singh, Interviews With Edward W. Saïd (Oxford: UP of Mississippi, 2004) pp. 19, 219.
- ↑ Edward Said, Defamation, Revisionist Style Шаблон:Webarchive, CounterPunch, 1999. Accessed 7 February 2010.
- ↑ "Friends rally to repulse attack on Edward Said" by Julian Borger 23 August 1999
- ↑ 31,0 31,1 31,2 Edward Said, Between Worlds, London Review of Books, 7 May 1998.
- ↑ Шаблон:Cite web
- ↑ 33,0 33,1 LA Jews For Peace, The Question of Palestine by Edward Saïd. (1997) Books on the Israel–Palestinian Conflict – Annotated Bibliography, accessed 3 January 2010.
- ↑ Omri, Mohamed-Salah, "The Portrait of the Intellectual as a Porter"
- ↑ Columbia University Press, About the Author: Humanism and Democratic Criticism, 2004.
- ↑ Moustafa Bayoumi and Andrew Rubin, Eds., The Edward Saïd Reader, Vintage, 2000, p. xv.
- ↑ Шаблон:Cite web
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- ↑ Joseph Conrad and the Fiction of Autobiography (1966).
- ↑ Шаблон:Cite book
- ↑ Edward Saïd, Power, Politics and Culture, Bloomsbury Publishing, 2001: pp. 77–79.
- ↑ 42,0 42,1 42,2 Windschuttle, Keith. "Edward Saïd's 'Orientalism revisited'", The New Criterion 17 January 1999. Archived 1 May 2008, at the Internet Archive, accessed 23 November 2011.
- ↑ 43,0 43,1 43,2 43,3 43,4 43,5 Шаблон:Cite book
- ↑ Kramer, Martin. "Enough Said (Book review: Dangerous Knowledge, by Robert Irwin)", March 2007. Retrieved 5 January 2010.
- ↑ Lewis, Bernard. "The Question of Orientalism", Islam and the West, London: 1993. pp. 99, 118.
- ↑ Irwin, Robert. For Lust of Knowing: The Orientalists and Their Enemies London:Allen Lane: 2006.
- ↑ "Said's Splash" Ivory Towers on Sand: The Failure of Middle Eastern Studies in America, Policy Papers 58 (Washington, D.C.: Washington Institute for Near East Policy, 2001).
- ↑ Martin Kramer said that "Fifteen years after [the] publication of Orientalism, the UCLA historian Nikki Keddie (whose work Saïd praised in Covering Islam: How the Media and the Experts Determine How We See the Rest of the World) allowed that Orientalism was 'important, and, in many ways, positive' ".[47]
- ↑ Шаблон:Cite web
- ↑ 50,0 50,1 Edward Saïd, "Orientalism Reconsidered", Cultural Critique magazine, No. 1, Autumn 1985, p. 96.
- ↑ Eagleton, Terry. Eastern Block (book review of For Lust of Knowing: The Orientalists and Their Enemies, 2006, by Robert Irwin) Шаблон:Webarchive, New Statesman, 13 February 2006.
- ↑ Martin Kramer. Ivory Towers on Sand: The Failure of Middle Eastern Studies in America (2001)
- ↑ Andrew N. Rubin, "Techniques of Trouble: Edward Saïd and the Dialectics of Cultural Philology", The South Atlantic Quarterly, 102.4 (2003). pp. 862–76.
- ↑ Emory University, Department of English, Introduction to Postcolonial Studies
- ↑ Шаблон:Cite journal
- ↑ Nicholas Dirks, Castes of Mind, Princeton: Princeton UP, 2001.
- ↑ Ronald Inden, Imagining India, New York: Oxford UP, 1990.
- ↑ Simon Springer, "Culture of Violence or Violent Orientalism? Neoliberalisation and Imagining the 'Savage Other' in Post-transitional Cambodia", Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers 34.3 (2009): 305–19.
- ↑ Homi K. Bhaba, Nation and Narration, New York & London: Routledge, Chapman & Hall, 1990.
- ↑ Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak, In Other Worlds: Essays in Cultural Politics, London: Methuen, 1987.
- ↑ Шаблон:Cite book
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- ↑ "Between Worlds", Reflections on Exile, and Other Essays (2002) pp. 563.
- ↑ Edward Saïd, "Zionism from the Standpoint of its Victims" (1979), in The Edward Saïd Reader, Vintage Books, 2000, pp. 114–68.
- ↑ Malise Ruthven, "Edward Said: Controversial Literary Critic and Bold Advocate of the Palestinian Cause in America," The Guardian 26 September 2003; accessed 1 March 2006.
- ↑ Edward Saïd, "The Morning After". London Review of Books Vol. 15 No. 20. 21 October 1993.
- ↑ Michael Wood, "On Edward Said", London Review of Books, 23 October 2003, accessed 5 January 2010.
- ↑ Edward Said, "The price of Camp David" Шаблон:Webarchive, Al Ahram Weekly, 23 July 2001. Accessed 5 January 2010.
- ↑ Werner Cohn: What Edward Said knows Page accessed 15 June 2012.
- ↑ Шаблон:Cite web
- ↑ Culture and resistance: conversations with Edward W. Said By Edward W. Said, David Barsamian, p. 57
- ↑ 75,0 75,1 Julian Vigo, "Edward Saïd and the Politics of Peace: From Orientalisms to Terrorology", A Journal of Contemporary Thought (2004): pp. 43–65.
- ↑ 76,0 76,1 Dinitia Smith, "A Stone's Throw is a Freudian Slip", The New York Times, 10 March 2001.
- ↑ Sunnie Kim, Edward Said Accused of Stoning in South Lebanon, Columbia Spectator, 19 July 2000.
- ↑ Шаблон:Cite news
- ↑ Edward Saïd and David Barsamian, Culture and Resistance – Conversations with Edward Said, South End Press, 2003: pp. 85–86
- ↑ Martin Kramer, Enough Said review of Dangerous Knowledge, by Robert Irwin, March 2007.
- ↑ Democracy Now!, "Syrian Expert Patrick Seale and Columbia University Professor Edward Said Discuss the State of the Middle East After the Invasion of Iraq", DemocracyNow.org, 15 April 2003. Accessed 4 January 2010.
- ↑ Said, Edward."Resources of Hope" Шаблон:Webarchive, Al-Ahram Weekly, 2 April 2003, accessed 26 April 2007.
- ↑ David Price, "How the FBI Spied on Edward Said," Шаблон:Webarchive CounterPunch 13 January 2006, accessed 15 January 2006.
- ↑ Шаблон:Cite book
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- ↑ Ranjan Ghosh, Edward Said and the Literary, Social, and Political World Шаблон:Webarchive, New York: Routledge, 2009: p. 22.
- ↑ Columbia University Press, Music at the Limits by Edward W. Saïd, accessed 5 January 2010.
- ↑ Rase, Sherri (8 April 2011), Conversations—with Mohammed Fairouz Шаблон:Webarchive, [Q]onStage, retrieved 19 April 2011
- ↑ "Homage to a Belly-dancer", Granta, 13 (Winter 1984).
- ↑ "Reflections on Exile", London Review of Books, 13 September 1990.
- ↑ Barenboim–Saïd Foundation, official website Шаблон:Webarchive, Barenboim-Said.org. Accessed 4 January 2010.
- ↑ The English Pen World Atlas, "Edward Said" Шаблон:Webarchive, accessed on 3 January 2010.
- ↑ Spinozalens, Internationale Spinozaprijs Laureates Шаблон:Webarchive, accessed on 3 January 2010.
- ↑ Columbia University Press, "About the Author", Humanism and Democratic Criticism, 2004.
- ↑ The English Pen World Atlas, Edward Said Шаблон:Webarchive, accessed on 3 January 2010.
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- ↑ Birzeit University, Edward Said National Conservatory of Music.
- ↑ "Conference: Waiting for the Barbarians: A Tribute to Edward Said." Шаблон:Webarchive 25–26 May 2007. Bogazici University. European Journal of Turkish Studies. Ejts.org. Accessed 5 January 2010.
- ↑ Jorgen Jensehausen, "Review: 'Waiting for the Barbarians'" Journal of Peace Research Vol. 46 No. 3 May 2009. Accessed 5 January 2010.
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