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- 339pages
- 12 heures de lecture
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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.
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Edward Said, Abdirahman A. Hussein
- Langue
- Année de publication
- 2004
- product-detail.submit-box.info.binding
- (souple),
- État du livre
- Abîmé
- Prix
- 9,43 €
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- Titre
- Edward Said
- Sous-titre
- Criticism and Society
- Langue
- Anglais
- Auteurs
- Abdirahman A. Hussein
- Éditeur
- Verso
- Publié
- 2004
- Format
- souple
- Pages
- 339
- ISBN10
- 1859843905
- ISBN13
- 9781859843901
- Séries
- Mots clés
- Thème historique, Biographies, Romans historiques, Thèmes psychologiques, Thématique philosophique, Art, Thématique musicale, Philosophie, Classiques, Spiritualité et spiritualisme, Politique, Autobiographies et mémoires, Économie, États-Unis, Guerres, 20e siècle, Biographies, Presse d'opinion & Essais, Société, Angleterre, Souvenirs, Féminisme, Yoga, Bouddhisme, Critique littéraire, Histoire du monde, Écriture, Inspiration, 21e siècle, Occultisme, Romantisme, Marxisme, Révolution, L'Âge des Lumières, Exil, Histoire russe, Théorie littéraire
- Description
- 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.




