Lexington Books
Pages: 292
Trim: 6¼ x 9½
978-0-7391-0988-5 • Hardback • April 2006 • $129.00 • (£99.00)
978-0-7391-3258-6 • Paperback • October 2008 • $57.99 • (£45.00)
Silvia Nagy-Zekmi is professor and chair of the Department of Classical and Modern Languages and Literatures at Villanova University.
Chapter 1 Knowledge, Power and Fear: Edward Said and the "Mainstreaming" of Postcolonial Literary Thought
Chapter 2 Said's Impact on Arab Intellectuals: Reverberations of Said's Thought in the Current Debates over Islam and US-Muslim/Arab Relations
3 The "Postcolonial" in Translation: Reading Said in Hebrew
4 Said's Foucault, or the Places of the Critic
5 The Wor(l)d, the Text, and the (In)fusionist
6 Edward Said's Counterpoint
7 Territorial Ambition: Edward Said's Unmasking of the Intellectuals' Complicity with State Expansion
8 Historiography as a Means for Power: "Otherization" and Imperialism Through the Writings of Edward Said
9 What Would Said Say? Reflections on Tradition, Imperialism, and Globalism
10 "Lewelinthecrown.co.uk": Orientalism's Strange Persistence in British South Asian Writing
11 Latin American Orientalism from Margin to Margins
12 The Legacy and the Future of Orientalism
13 Occidentalism: Edward Said's Legacy for the Occidentalist Imaginary and its Critique
14 Nation and Narration: The English Novel and Englishness
15 Fish(ing) for Colonial Counter-Narratives in the Language of Post-Colonial Criticism
16 Subject and Citizen: Ambivalent Identity in Postcolonial Cameroon
17 Was Edward Said Right in Depicting Albert Camus as an Imperialist Writer?
18 Edward Said, John Berger, Jean Mohr: Seeking an Other Optic
19 After the Last Sky: A Liminal Space
20 Other Places: Said's Map of the Middle East
Clearly this is the most comprehensive analysis of Edward Said's work yet compiled, a collection that will open up the full range of Said's impact on the humanities. This book combines a range of investigation with new insights into his work.
— Bill Ashcroft, Hong Kong University