Edward Said and the work of the critic : speaking truth to power

Bibliographic Information

Edward Said and the work of the critic : speaking truth to power

Paul A. Bové, editor

Duke University Press, 2000

  • : alk. paper
  • : pbk. : alk. paper

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Note

"Boundary 2 book."--Facing t.p

All but three of the essays were originally published in Boundary 2, summer 1998

Includes bibliographical references and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

For at least two decades the career of Edward Said has defined what it means to be a public intellectual today. Although attacked as a terrorist and derided as a fraud for his work on behalf of his fellow Palestinians, Said's importance extends far beyond his political activism. In this volume a distinguished group of scholars assesses nearly every aspect of Said's work-his contributions to postcolonial theory, his work on racism and ethnicity, his aesthetics and his resistance to the aestheticization of politics, his concepts of figuration, his assessment of the role of the exile in a metropolitan culture, and his work on music and the visual arts. In two separate interviews, Said himself comments on a variety of topics, among them the response of the American Jewish community to his political efforts in the Middle East. Yet even as the Palestinian struggle finds a central place in his work, it is essential-as the contributors demonstrate-to see that this struggle rests on and gives power to his general "critique of colonizers" and is not simply the outgrowth of a local nationalism. Perhaps more than any other person in the United States, Said has changed how the U.S. media and American intellectuals must think about and represent Palestinians, Islam, and the Middle East. Most importantly, this change arises not as a result of political action but out of a potent humanism-a breadth of knowledge and insight that has nourished many fields of inquiry. Originally a special issue of boundary 2, the book includes new articles on minority culture and on orientalism in music, as well as an interview with Said by Jacqueline Rose. Supporting the claim that the last third of the twentieth century can be called the "Age of Said," this collection will enlighten and engage students in virtually any field of humanistic study. Contributors. Jonathan Arac, Paul A. Bove, Terry Cochran, Barbara Harlow, Kojin Karatani, Rashid I. Khalidi, Sabu Kohsu, Ralph Locke, Mustapha Marrouchi, Jim Merod, W. J. T. Mitchell, Aamir R. Mufti, Jacqueline Rose, Edward W. Said, Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak, Lindsay Waters

Table of Contents

Introduction / Paul A. Bove 1 Edward Said talks to Jacqueline Rose / Jacqueline Rose 9 The panic of the visual: a conversation with Edward Said / W. J. T. Mitchell 31 Race before racism: the disappearance of the American / Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak 51 Criticism between opposition and counterpoint / Jonathan Arac 66 The matter of language / Terry Cochran 78 In responses begins responsibility: music and emotion / Lindsay Waters 97 The sublime lyrical abstractions of Edward W. Said / Jim Merod 114 Uses of aesthetics: after orientalism / Kojin Karatani 139 Edward W. Said and the American public sphere: speaking truth to power / Rashid I. Khalidi 152 Sappers in the stacks: colonial archives, land mines, and truth commissions / Barbara Harlow 165 Counternarratives, recoveries, refusals / Mustapha Marrouchi 187 Auerbach in Istanbul: Edward Said, secular criticism, and the question of minority culture / Aamir R. Mufti 229 Exoticism and orientalism in music: problems for the worldly critic / Ralph P. Locke 257 Notes 283 Index 313

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