Edward Said: Criticism and Society
Few public intellectuals have had such a big impact outside the academy as Edward Said.This, the first full-length intellectual biography of the groundbreaking author of Orientalism, reveals some startling observations. Abdirahman Hussein argues that underneath Said’s carefully constructed eclecticism there is a global method in his work. Taking Beginnings as the key text Hussein asserts that the discontinuity of the Palestinian experience informs Said’s entire oeuvre but simultaneously transcends it in a permanent search for a new synthesis. Hussein argues that this informs Said’s approach not only to Conrad, Swift, and Eliot, but also to Lukács, Williams, Gramsci and Adorno.
1115888930
Edward Said: Criticism and Society
Few public intellectuals have had such a big impact outside the academy as Edward Said.This, the first full-length intellectual biography of the groundbreaking author of Orientalism, reveals some startling observations. Abdirahman Hussein argues that underneath Said’s carefully constructed eclecticism there is a global method in his work. Taking Beginnings as the key text Hussein asserts that the discontinuity of the Palestinian experience informs Said’s entire oeuvre but simultaneously transcends it in a permanent search for a new synthesis. Hussein argues that this informs Said’s approach not only to Conrad, Swift, and Eliot, but also to Lukács, Williams, Gramsci and Adorno.
24.95 In Stock
Edward Said: Criticism and Society

Edward Said: Criticism and Society

by Abdirahman A. Hussein
Edward Said: Criticism and Society

Edward Said: Criticism and Society

by Abdirahman A. Hussein

Paperback

$24.95 
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Overview

Few public intellectuals have had such a big impact outside the academy as Edward Said.This, the first full-length intellectual biography of the groundbreaking author of Orientalism, reveals some startling observations. Abdirahman Hussein argues that underneath Said’s carefully constructed eclecticism there is a global method in his work. Taking Beginnings as the key text Hussein asserts that the discontinuity of the Palestinian experience informs Said’s entire oeuvre but simultaneously transcends it in a permanent search for a new synthesis. Hussein argues that this informs Said’s approach not only to Conrad, Swift, and Eliot, but also to Lukács, Williams, Gramsci and Adorno.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781859843901
Publisher: Verso Books
Publication date: 09/17/2004
Pages: 348
Product dimensions: 5.88(w) x 8.83(h) x 0.75(d)

About the Author

Abdirahman A. Hussein was born and educated in Somalia and currently teaches in the Department of English at the University of Tennessee, Knoxville.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgmentsviii
Introduction1
A Technique of Trouble: Dialectical Subversion and Archaeo-genealogy4
Dismantling Ideological Walls8
Debating with Knowledge, Wrestling with History10
The Myth of "Postcolonial" Theory: Intellectuals, Collusion, and Opposition12
Is an Affiliated Human Community Possible?17
1Reflexivity and Self-creation in Said and Conrad19
The Artistic Self in Conditions of Extremity27
Dialectical Agonism in Conrad and Said: The "Either/Or" Imperative32
Normativity as Negativity37
Conrad and the Imperialism of Ideas43
The Ego Historicized: Space-Time as Sedimented Gestalts48
2Beginnings and Authority: Ideology, Critique, and Community (I)53
A Theoretical Intervention53
The Paradox of Modernity70
The Destruction of Foundations: Beginnings in the Absence of Origins72
Rationality and Its Discontents: The Case Against Idealism and Empiricism81
Reason as Intentionality: Towards an Experimental Rationality90
Ideological Currency Versus Critical Knowledge92
Language as Event: The Dynamics of Textuality97
3Beginnings and Authority: Ideology, Critique, and Community (II)105
Narrativity and the Natural Order: The Fate of the Classical Novel105
The High Drama of Modernism: Textual Production and the Dilemmas of Modernity111
The Grand Gesture of Structuralism: Much Ado About Nothing122
Vico and Foucault: The "Space" Between Philosophy, Language, and History128
The Power of Discourse: Foucault on Truth, Knowledge, History131
Vico's Poetic History: Humanity as Autodidact138
4The Struggle for the World: Culture, Hegemony, and Intellectuals148
Should Worldiness Be an Issue?160
Mapping Affiliations: The Genealogy of Modernity165
Demystifying Culture: Hegemony or Community?172
The Worldliness of Language: Texts as Bearers of Authority182
Collusion and Amnesia: Refining Critics, "Radical" Theory, and the Liberal Consensus193
Critical Consciousness, Methodology, and History210
5Culture and Barbarism: Eurocentric Thought and Imperialism224
Critical Misreception: The Case of Orientalism224
Orientalist Discourse as Hegemonic Intention236
The Birth of Hierarchism: Identity, Imperialism, and the Canon248
Structure of Attitudes and References253
The Geography of Imperialism: Activating the Historical Stage259
Contrapuntality Versus Hierarchy: An Atonal Conception of Community261
Ahabian Megalomania: Imperialism in the American Century265
Zionism, Orientalism, and Euro-American Imperialism269
Zionism and God: Divine Self-legitimation289
Conclusion: Normativity, Critique, and Philosophical Method296
Notes310
Index331
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