- Published: 02/08/2012
- ISBN: 9781847085979
- 153x30mm
- 656 pages
Reflections On Exile
Edward W. Said
With their powerful blend of political and aesthetic concerns, Edward W. Said’s writings have transformed the field of literary studies. As in the title essay, the widely admired “Reflections on Exile,” the fact of his own exile and the fate of the Palestinians have given both form and the force of intimacy to the questions Said has pursued. Taken together, these essays–from the famous to those that will surprise even Said’s most assiduous followers–afford rare insight into the formation of a critic and the development of an intellectual vocation. Said’s topics are many and diverse, from the movie heroics of Tarzan to the machismo of Ernest Hemingway to the shades of difference that divide Alexandria and Cairo. He offers major reconsiderations of writers and artists such as George Orwell, Giambattista Vico, Georg Lukacs, R. P. Blackmur, E. M. Cioran, Naguib Mahfouz, Herman Melville, Joseph Conrad, Walter Lippman, Samuel Huntington, Antonio Gramsci, and Raymond Williams. Invigorating, edifying, acutely attentive to the vying pressures of personal and historical experience, his book is a source of immeasurable intellectual delight.
£14.99
To ask him for a tutorial and a reading list, as I more than once did, was to be humbled by the sheer reach of his erudition. I can still hear the doors that opened in my mind as he explicated George Eliot's rather recondite Daniel Deronda
Christopher Hitchens
This book is a monument to the life of the intellect in the modern world
Seamus Deane
His intelligence was so capacious that you never knew, when you entered it, where you might find yourself
Jacqueline Rose
From the Same Author
Edward W. Said on Granta.com
Essays & Memoir | Granta 67
Self-Consciousness
Edward W. Said
‘It was through my mother that I grew more aware of my body as incredibly fraught and problematic.’
Essays & Memoir | Granta 13
Reflections on Exile
Edward W. Said
‘Exiles feel, therefore, an urgent need to reconstitute their broken lives, usually by choosing to see themselves as part of a triumphant ideology or a restored people.’