Places of mind : a life of Edward Said
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| Title: | Places of mind : a life of Edward Said |
|---|---|
| Authors: | Blumi, Isa |
| Publisher Information: | Stockholms universitet, Institutionen för Asien- och Mellanösternstudier (IAM) 2022 |
| Document Type: | Electronic Resource |
| Abstract: | Writing with insight and originality about the late Edward Said is no easy task. As both an icon and a lightning rod for a variety of scholars thinking and writing about Europe’s relationship with the larger world, the range and complexity of Said’s persona and ideological contributions to postcolonial studies seem to be already well known. Brennan’s investment in telling Said’s story anew provides an eye-opening gem that reveals what past scholarship on the Princeton-trained scholar of Palestinian heritage, who studied European literature and culture, overlooks. A former student of Said, Brennan (Univ. of Minnesota) draws on testimonies of adversaries and loving admirers alike, close members of Said's family, and even FBI files to reveal Said's impact from his position at Columbia University on events in his native Middle East and on Western politics. In this sympathetic biography, Brennan’s quest to afford more complexity to the already robust story around Said's many intellectual and political battles proves intriguing and illuminating. Speculations as to the best tools to understand such a momentous figure—poetry instead of fiction—reveal much about the author’s engagement with a world his professor forged for him through his lessons. Rewarding, fresh insights await readers. Summing Up: Highly recommended. General readers and advanced undergraduates through faculty |
| Index Terms: | Edward Said, Biography, Arabic, Middle East, Orientalism, Cultural Studies, Kulturstudier, Article, book review, info:eu-repo/semantics/review, text |
| URL: | ChoiceReviews, 0009-4978, 2022, 59:7 |
| Availability: | Open access content. Open access content info:eu-repo/semantics/restrictedAccess |
| Note: | English |
| Other Numbers: | UPE oai:DiVA.org:su-210478 0000-0003-3591-741x 1356422796 |
| Contributing Source: | UPPSALA UNIV LIBR From OAIster®, provided by the OCLC Cooperative. |
| Accession Number: | edsoai.on1356422796 |
| Database: | OAIster |
| Abstract: | Writing with insight and originality about the late Edward Said is no easy task. As both an icon and a lightning rod for a variety of scholars thinking and writing about Europe’s relationship with the larger world, the range and complexity of Said’s persona and ideological contributions to postcolonial studies seem to be already well known. Brennan’s investment in telling Said’s story anew provides an eye-opening gem that reveals what past scholarship on the Princeton-trained scholar of Palestinian heritage, who studied European literature and culture, overlooks. A former student of Said, Brennan (Univ. of Minnesota) draws on testimonies of adversaries and loving admirers alike, close members of Said's family, and even FBI files to reveal Said's impact from his position at Columbia University on events in his native Middle East and on Western politics. In this sympathetic biography, Brennan’s quest to afford more complexity to the already robust story around Said's many intellectual and political battles proves intriguing and illuminating. Speculations as to the best tools to understand such a momentous figure—poetry instead of fiction—reveal much about the author’s engagement with a world his professor forged for him through his lessons. Rewarding, fresh insights await readers. Summing Up: Highly recommended. General readers and advanced undergraduates through faculty |
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