A searing portrait of Palestinian life and identity that is at once an exploration of Edward Said's unclaimable past and a testimony to the lives of those living in exile.
About the author Born in Jerusalem in 1935, Edward W. Said was one of the world's most celebrated, outspoken, and influential public intellectuals until his death on September 24, 2003. He is the author of more than twenty books that have been translated into thirty-six languages, includingBeginnings(1975);The Question of Palestine(1979); the internationally acclaimedOrientalism(1979);Covering Islam(1980);The World, the Text, and the Critic(1983);After the Last Sky(1986);Musical Elaborations(1991);Culture and Imperialism(1993);Out of Place: A Memoir(1999);Reflections on Exile and Other Essays(2001);Power, Politics, and Culture(2001); andFreud and the Non-European(2003). He began teaching at Columbia University in 1963 and became University Professor of English and Comparative Literature there in 1992. He was a past president of the Modern Language Association and was a member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, the American Academy of Arts and Letters, the Royal Society of Literature, and the American Philosophical Society. Said was the recipient of numerous prizes and distinctions—including twenty honorary doctorates—and he was first U.S. citizen to receive the prestigious Sultan Owais Prize.
Publication date: July 1999 ISBN:9780231114493 Pages: 192 Format:Paperback