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A bibliographical guide to Edward Said.


This entry provides a bilingual bibliographical guide to Edward Said's writing (books and articles), works on him (books and journals), and sources of information on him (documentary films and websites). The Arabic section provides a list of translations and works on Said. The bibliography is extensive but not exhaustive. It is meant to help researchers consulting Edward Said's works in English and Arabic and/or exploring his reception in both languages.

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This bibliography is not meant to be exhaustive, but it strives to be as inclusive as possible, to serve as a guide for researchers. Besides works by Said, there is also a section of works on Said that does not attempt to cite all writings on him, but refers to books and special issues of journals devoted (or devoting a dossier) to him.

When Said published an essay in more than one place (both in a journal and, later, in a book of his, for example), we have selected the version that is more accessible to the reader (in this case the book, rather than the article in a journal). Some of Said's books were published by more than one publisher (occasionally in the same year). We opted for listing only one. When referring to books by Said, a table of contents was provided to give the reader an idea of the breadth of the topics the book deals with.

As for Said's journalistic essays--many of which have been collected in books--we simply referred to the dailies, weeklies, and monthlies in which Said wrote regularly, and provided their websites, so that those interested can undertake the search themselves online. We have also included websites devoted to Said and available documentaries.

The bibliographical guide is divided into the following categories:

I. Individual Books by Said

II. Edited Books by Said

III. Co-authored Books by Said

IV. Articles, Introductions, and Other Writings by Said

V. Periodicals to which Said Contributed Regularly

VI. Documentary Films on Said

VII. Books on Said

VIII. Special Issues of Journals on Said

IX. Websites and Electronic Lists dedicated to Said

There is also an Arabic bibliographical guide to Said in the Arabic section of this issue, which lists the translations of Said into Arabic and other works on him. In this section, we have only mentioned English-language periodicals for which Said wrote regularly.

I am grateful to the Alif team for their help in compiling this bibliographical guide, and to many others who have kindly advised me in this project and whose names are acknowledged as supporters of Alif on the first page of the issue. No doubt, some errors or missing information will be discovered after this issue goes to press. We urge anyone who is interested in preserving the legacy of Edward Said Edward Wadie Saïd, Arabic: إدوارد وديع سعيد,  to inform us by e-mail (said-admin@aucegypt.edu), so that we can correct and update this bibliographical guide periodically, making it available to the electronic Said Forum and to whoever might need to consult it.

I. Individual Books (arranged chronologically):

Joseph Conrad and the Fiction of Autobiography. Cambridge: Harvard UP, 1966.

Part One: Conrad's Letter:

I. The Claims of Individuality II. Character and the Knitting Machine knitting machine

Machine for textile and garment production. Flatbed machines may be hand-operated or power-driven, and, by selection of colour, type of stitch, cam design, and Jacquard device (see Jacquard loom), almost unlimited variety is possible.
, 1896-1912 III. The Claims of Fiction, 1896-1912 IV. Worlds at War, 1912-1918 V. The New Order 1918-1924.

Part Two: Conrad's Shorter Fiction:

VI. The Past and the Present VII. The Craft of the Present VIII. Truth, Idea, and the Image IX. The Shadow Line.

Beginnings: Intention and Method. NY: Basic Books, 1975.

1. Beginning Ideas 2. A Meditation on Beginnings 3. The Novel as Beginning Intention 4. Beginning with a Text 5. Abecedarium Culturae: Absence, Writing, Statement, Discourse, Archeology, Structuralism structuralism, theory that uses culturally interconnected signs to reconstruct systems of relationships rather than studying isolated, material things in themselves. This method found wide use from the early 20th cent.  6. Conclusion: Vico in His Work and in This.

Orientalism. NY: Pantheon, 1978.

Chapter 1: The Scope of Orientalism:

I. Knowing the Oriental II. Imaginative Geography and Its Representations: Orientalizing the Oriental III. Projects IV. Crisis.

Chapter 2: Orientalist Structures and Restructures:

I. Redrawn Frontiers, Redefined Issues, Secularized Religion II. Silvestre de Sacy Silvestre de Sacy: see Sacy, Antoine Isaac, Baron Silvestre de.  and Ernest Renan Ernest Renan (February 28, 1823–October 12, 1892) was a French philosopher and writer, deeply attached to his native province of Brittany. He is best known for his influential historical works on early Christianity and his political theories. : Rational Anthropology and Philological phi·lol·o·gy  
n.
1. Literary study or classical scholarship.

2. See historical linguistics.



[Middle English philologie, from Latin philologia, love of learning
 Laboratory III. Oriental Residence and Scholarship: The Requirements of Lexicography lexicography, the applied study of the meaning, evolution, and function of the vocabulary units of a language for the purpose of compilation in book form—in short, the process of dictionary making. Early lexicography, practiced from the 7th cent. B.C.  and Imagination IV. Pilgrims and Pilgrimages, British and French.

Chapter 3: Orientalism Now:

I. Latent and Manifest Orientalism II. Style, Expertise, Vision: Orientalism's Worldliness III. Modern Anglo-French Orientalism in Fullest Flower IV. The Latest Phase.

The Palestine Question and the American Context (I. P.S. Papers 1). Beirut: Institute for Palestinian Studies, 1979.

The Question of Palestine. NY: Times Books, 1979.

Introduction

1. The Question of Palestine:

I. Palestine and the Palestinians II. Palestine and the Liberal West III. The Issue of Representation IV. Palestinian Rights.

2. Zionism from the Standpoint of Its Victims:

I. Zionism and the Attitudes of European Colonialism II. Zionist Population, Palestinian Depopulation DEPOPULATION. In its most proper signification, is the destruction of the people of a country or place. This word is, however, taken rather in a passive than an active one; we say depopulation, to designate a diminution of inhabitants, arising either from violent causes, or the want of .

3. Toward Palestinian Self-Determination:

I. The Remnants, Those in Exile. Those Under Occupation II. The Emergence of a Palestinian Consciousness III. The PLO PLO
abbr.
Palestine Liberation Organization


PLO Palestine Liberation Organization

Noun 1. PLO
 Rises to Prominence IV. The Palestinians Still in Question.

4. The Palestinian Question After Camp David Camp David, U.S. presidential retreat, located in Catoctin Mountain Park (see National Parks and Monuments, table), in NW Md. The Camp David accords, the terms of a peace treaty between Egypt and Israel, were established (1978) at this site; other negotiations and :

I. Terms of Reference Terms of reference allude to a mutual agreement under which a command, element, or unit exercises authority or undertakes specific missions or tasks relative to another command, element, or unit. Also called TORs. : Rhetoric and Power II. Egypt, Israel, and the United States United States, officially United States of America, republic (2005 est. pop. 295,734,000), 3,539,227 sq mi (9,166,598 sq km), North America. The United States is the world's third largest country in population and the fourth largest country in area. : What Else the Treaty Involved III. Palestinian and Regional Activities IV. Uncertain Future Epilogue.

Covering Islam: How the Media And The Experts Determine How We See The Rest Of The World. NY: Pantheon, 1981.

Chapter One: Islam As News:

I. Islam and the West II. Communities of Interpretation III. The Princess Episode in Context.

Chapter Two: The Iran Story:

I. Holy War II. The Loss of Iran III. Unexamined and Hidden Assumptions IV. Another Country.

Chapter Three: Knowledge and Power:

I. The Politics of Interpreting Islam: Orthodox and Antithetical an·ti·thet·i·cal   also an·ti·thet·ic
adj.
1. Of, relating to, or marked by antithesis.

2. Being in diametrical opposition. See Synonyms at opposite.
 Knowledge II. Knowledge and Interpretation.

The World, the Text, and the Critic. Cambridge, MA: Harvard UP, 1983. Introduction: Secular Criticism 1. The World, the Text, and the Critic 2. Swift's Tory Anarchy 3. Swift as Intellectual 4. Conrad: The Presentation of Narrative 5. On Repetition 6. On Originality 7. Roads Taken and Not Taken in Contemporary Criticism 8. Reflections on American "Left" Literary Criticism 9. Criticism Between Culture and System 10. Traveling Theory 11. Raymond Schwab and the Romance of Ideas 12. Islam, Philology phi·lol·o·gy  
n.
1. Literary study or classical scholarship.

2. See historical linguistics.



[Middle English philologie, from Latin philologia, love of learning
, and French Culture: Renan and Massignon Conclusion: Religious Criticism.

Musical Elaborations. NY: Columbia UP, 1991. Introduction One: Performance as an Extreme Occasion Two: On the Transgressive trans·gres·sive  
adj.
1. Exceeding a limit or boundary, especially of social acceptability.

2. Of or relating to a genre of fiction, filmmaking, or art characterized by graphic depictions of behavior that violates socially
 Elements in Music Three: Melody, Solitude, and Affirmation.

Culture and Imperialism. London: Chatto and Windus, 1993.

Chapter One: Overlapping Territories, Intertwined Histories: I. Empire, Geography and Culture II. Images of the Past, Pure and Impure im·pure  
adj. im·pur·er, im·pur·est
1. Not pure or clean; contaminated.

2. Not purified by religious rite; unclean.

3. Immoral or sinful: impure thoughts.
 III. Two Visions in Heart of Darkness Heart of Darkness

adventure tale of journey into heart of the Belgian Congo and into depths of man’s heart. [Br. Lit.: Heart of Darkness, Magill III, 447–449]

See : Journey
 IV. Discrepant dis·crep·ant  
adj.
Marked by discrepancy; disagreeing.



[Middle English discrepaunt, from Latin discrep
 Experiences V. Connecting Empire to Secular Interpretation.

Chapter Two: Consolidated Vision:

I. Narrative and Social Space II. Jane Austen and Empire III. The Cultural Integrity of the Empire IV. The Empire at Work: Verdi's Aida V. The Pleasures of Imperialism VI. The Native under Control VII. Camus and the French Imperial Experience VIII. A Note on Modernism.

Chapter Three: Resistance and Opposition:

I. There Are Two Sides; Themes of Resistance Culture II. Yeats and Decolonization decolonization

Process by which colonies become independent of the colonizing country. Decolonization was gradual and peaceful for some British colonies largely settled by expatriates but violent for others, where native rebellions were energized by nationalism.
 III. The Voyage in and the Emergence of Opposition IV. Collaboration, Independence, and Liberation.

Chapter Four: Freedom from Domination in the Future:

I. American Ascendancy: The Public Space at War II. Challenging Orthodoxy and Authority III. Movements and Migrations.

The Pen and the Sword: Conversations with David Barsamian David Barsamian is an American radio broadcaster and writer of Armenian descent. He is the founder and director of Alternative Radio, the Boulder, Colorado-based syndicated weekly talk program heard on some 125 radio stations in various countries. . Monroe, Main: Common Courage P, 1994. Introduction (by Eqbal Ahmed) 1. The Politics and Culture of Palestinian Exile 2. Orientalism Revisited 3. The Pen and the Sword: Culture and Imperialism 4. The Israeli/PLO Accord: A Critical Assessment 5. Palestine: Betrayal of History.

The Politics of Dispossession The wrongful, nonconsensual ouster or removal of a person from his or her property by trick, compulsion, or misuse of the law, whereby the violator obtains actual occupation of the land. Dispossession encompasses intrusion, disseisin, or deforcement. : The Struggle for Palestinian Self-determination, 1969-1994 [Collected articles from a variety of periodicals published between 1968-1994]. NY: Pantheon, 1994.

One: Palestine and the Palestinians:

1. The Palestinian Experience (1968-1969) 2. The Palestinians One Year Since Amman (1971) 3. Palestinians (1977) 4. The Acre and the Goat (1979) 5. Peace and the Palestinian Rights (1980) 6. Palestinians in the United States (1981) 7. The Formation of American Public Opinion on the Question of Palestine (1980) 8. Palestinians in the Aftermath of Beirut: A Preliminary Stocktaking stock·tak·ing  
n.
1. A reappraisal of a situation, a person, or one's own position or prospects.

2. The act or process of inventorying merchandise or the supplies on hand.
 (1982) 9. An Ideology of Difference (1985) 10. Solidly Behind Arafat (1983) 11. Who Would Speak for Palestinians? (1985) 12. On Palestinian Identity: A Conversation with Salman Rushdie Noun 1. Salman Rushdie - British writer of novels who was born in India; one of his novels is regarded as blasphemous by Muslims and a fatwa was issued condemning him to death (born in 1947)
Ahmed Salman Rushdie, Rushdie
 (1986) 13. Review of Wedding in Galilee Galilee (găl`ĭlē), region, N Israel, roughly the portion north of the plain of Esdraelon. Galilee was the chief scene of the ministry of Jesus.  and Friendship's Death (1988) 14. How to Answer Palestine's Challenge (1988) 15. Palestine Agenda (1988) 16. Palestinians in the Gulf War's Aftermath (1991) 17. The Prospects for Peace in the Middle East (1991) 18. Return to Palestine-Israel (1992).

Two: The Arab World “Arab States” redirects here. For the political alliance, see Arab League.
The Arab World (Arabic: العالم العربي; Transliteration: al-`alam al-`arabi) stretches from the Atlantic Ocean in the
:

19. US Policy and the Conflict of Powers in the Middle East (1973) 20. The Arab Right Wing (1979) 21. A Changing World Order: The Arab Dimension (1980) 22. The Death of Sadat (1981) 23. Permission to Narrate 24. "Our" Lebanon (1984) 25. Sanctum of the Strong (1989) 26. Behind Saddam Hussein's Moves (1990) 27. A Tragic Convergence (1991) 28. Ignorant Armies Clash by Night (1991) 29. The Arab American Arab Americans are Americans of Arab ancestry and constitute an ethnicity made up of several waves of immigrants from twenty-two Arab countries, stretching from Morocco in the west to Oman in the south east to Iraq in the north.  War: The Politics of Information (1991) 30. The Intellectuals and the War (1991).

Three: Politics and Intellectuals:

31. Chomsky and the Question of Palestine (1975) 32. Reticences of an Orientalist (1986) 33. Identity, Negation, and Violence (1988) 34. The Orientalist Express: Thomas Friedman Thomas Lauren Friedman, OBE (born July 20, 1953), is an American journalist. He is an op-ed contributor to The New York Times, whose column appears twice weekly and mainly addresses topics on foreign affairs.  Wraps up the Middle East (1989) 35. On Nelson Mandela Noun 1. Nelson Mandela - South African statesman who was released from prison to become the nation's first democratically elected president in 1994 (born in 1918)
Mandela, Nelson Rolihlahla Mandela
, and Others (1990) 36. Embargoed Literature (1990) 37. The Splendid Tapestry of Arab Life (1991) 38. The Other Arab Muslims (1993).

Representations of the Intellectual: The 1993 Reith Lectures A Reith Lecture is a lecture in a series of annual radio lectures given by leading figures of the day, commissioned by the BBC and broadcast on BBC Radio 4. They were begun in 1948, in honour of the first Director-General of the BBC, John Reith. . NY: Pantheon, 1994.

Introduction I. Representations of the Intellectual II. Holding Nations and Traditions at Bay III. Intellectual Exile IV. Professionals and Amateurs V. Speaking Truth to Power VI. Gods that Always Fail.

Peace and its Discontents: Essays on Palestine in the Middle East Peace Process [Collected essays written originally for Al-Ahram Weekly Al-Ahram Weekly is the leading English-language newspaper in Egypt. It was established in 1875 by the Al-Ahram newspaper which also runs a French-language version, Al-Ahram Hebdo. See also
  • Al-Ahram
External links
  • Al-Ahram Weekly
 and Al-Hayat]. NY: Vintage, 1995.

Preface Christopher Hitchens Christopher Eric Hitchens (born April 13, 1949) is a British-American author, journalist and literary critic. Currently living in Washington, D.C., he has been a columnist at Vanity Fair, The Atlantic, The Nation, Slate and Free Inquiry  Introduction 1. The PLO's Bargain (September 1993) 2. The Morning After (October 1993) 3. Who is in Charge of the Past and the Future? (November 1993) 4. Facts, Facts and More Facts (December 1993) 5. The Limits to Cooperation (Late December 1993) 6. Time to Move On (January 1994) 7. Bitter Truths About Gaza (Late February/Early March 1994) 8. Further Reflections on the Hebron Massacre There have been several events termed the Hebron massacre:
  • During the 1929 Hebron massacre, 67 Jews in Hebron were murdered by Arabs. The rest of the Jewish community was evacuated by the British.
 (March 1994) 9. 'Peace at Hand?' (May 1994) 10. The Symbols and Realities of Power (June 1994) 11. Winners and Losers (July 1994) 12. The American 'Peace Process' (August 1994) 13. Decolonizing the Mind (September 1994) 14. A Cold and Ungenerous un·gen·er·ous  
adj.
1. Slow or reluctant in giving, forgiving, or sharing; stingy.

2. Harsh in judgment; unkind.

3. Mean-spirited; illiberal; ignoble.
 Peace (October 1994) 15. Violence in a Good Cause? (November 1994) 16. Changes for the Worst (December 1994) 17. Two Peoples in One Land (December 1994) 18. Sober Truths about Israel and Zionism (January 1995) 19. Memory and Forgetfulness Forgetfulness
See also Carelessness.

Absent-Minded Beggar, The

ballad of forgetful soldiers who fought in the Boer War. [Br. Lit.: “The Absent-Minded Beg-gars” in Payton, 3]

absent-minded professor
 in the United States (February 1995) 20. Justifications of Power in a Terminal Phase (April 1995) Conclusion: The Middle East 'Peace Process': Misleading Images and Brutal Actualities (May 1995) Appendix: Interview from Al'arabi, Cairo (January 30, 1995).

Out of Place: A Memoir. NY: Random House, 1999.

Reflections on Exile and Other Essays. Cambridge: Harvard UP, 2000.

Introduction 1. Labyrinth of Incarnations: The Essays of Maurice Merleau-Ponty Maurice Merleau-Ponty [mɔ'ʁis mɛʁlopɔ̃'ti (March 14, 1908 – May 4, 1961) was a French phenomenological philosopher, strongly influenced by Edmund Husserl.  2. Sense and Sensibility Sense and Sensibility is a novel by the English novelist Jane Austen, that was first published in 1811. It was the first of Austen's novels to be published, under the pseudonym "A Lady". : On R. P. Blackmur, Georges Poulet
This article is about the literary critic. For other people with the same name, see Georges Poulet (disambiguation).
Georges Poulet (1902-1991) was a Belgian literary critic associated with the Geneva School.
, and E. D. Hirsh 3. Amateur of the Insoluble: On E. M. Cioran 4. A Standing Civil War: On T. E. Lawrence 5. Arabic Prose and Prose Fiction After 1948 6. Between Chance and Determinism: Lukacs's Aesthetik 7. Conrad and Nietzsche 8. Vico on the Discipline of Bodies and Texts 9. Tourism among the Dogs: On George Orwell Noun 1. George Orwell - imaginative British writer concerned with social justice (1903-1950)
Eric Arthur Blair, Eric Blair, Orwell
 10. Bitter Dispatches from the Third World 11. Grey Eminence: On Walter Lippmann Noun 1. Walter Lippmann - United States journalist (1889-1974)
Lippmann
 12. Among the Believers: On V. S. Naipaul Sir Vidiadhar Surajprasad Naipaul, KB, TC (b. August 17 1932, Chaguanas, Trinidad and Tobago), better known as V. S. Naipaul, is a Trinidadian-born British writer of Indo-Trinidadian descent, currently resident in Wiltshire.  13. Opponents, Audiences, Constituencies, and Community 14. Bursts of Meaning: On John Berger and Jean Mohr 15. Egyptian Rites 16. The Future of Criticism 17. Reflections on Exile 18. Michel Foucault Michel Foucault (IPA pronunciation: [miˈʃɛl fuˈko]) (October 15, 1926 – June 25, 1984) was a French philosopher, historian and sociologist. , 1927-1984 19. Orientalism Reconsidered 20. Remembrances of Things Played: Presence and Memory in the Pianist's Art: On Glenn Gould Glenn Herbert Gould[][] (September 25, 1932 – October 4, 1982) was a Canadian pianist, noted especially for his recordings of the music of Johann Sebastian Bach.  21. How Not to Get Gored: On Ernest Hemingway 22. Foucault and the Imagination of Power 23. The Horizon of R. P. Blackmur 24 Cairo Recalled: Growing Up in the Cultural Crosscurrents of 1940s Egypt 25. Through Gringo grin·go  
n. pl. grin·gos Offensive Slang
Used as a disparaging term for a foreigner in Latin America, especially an American or English person.
 Eyes: With Conrad in Latin America 26. The Quest for Gillo Potecorvo 27. Representing the Colonized Colonized
This occurs when a microorganism is found on or in a person without causing a disease.

Mentioned in: Isolation
: Anthropology's Interlocutors 28. After Mahfouz 29. Jungle Calling: On Johnny Weissmuller's Tarzan 30. Cairo and Alexandria 31. Homage to a Belly-Dancer: On Tahia Carioca 32. Introduction to Moby-Dick 33. The Politics of Knowledge 34. Identity, Authority, and Freedom: The Potentate POTENTATE. One who has a great power over, an extended country; a sovereign.
     2. By the naturalization laws, an alien is required, before he can be naturalized, to renounce all allegiance and fidelity to any foreign prince, potentate, state, or sovereign whatever.
 and the Traveler 35. The Anglo-Arab Encounter: On Ahdaf Soueif 36. Nationalism, Human Rights and Interpretation 37. Traveling Theory Reconsidered 38. History, Literature, and Geography 39. Contra Mumdum: On Eric Hobsbawm 40. Bach's Genius, Schumann's Electricity, Chopin's Ruthlessness, Rosen's Gift 41. Fantasy's Role in the Making of Nations: On Jaqueline Rose 43. From Silence to Sound and Back Again: Music, Literature, and History 44. On Lost Causes 45. Between Worlds 46. The Clash of Definitions: On Samuel Huntington.

The End of the Peace Process: Oslo and After [Essays, most of which were originally published in Al-Ahram Weekly and Al-Hayat]. NY: Pantheon, 2000.

Introduction 1. The First Step 2. How Much and For How Long'? 3. Where Negotiations Have Led 4. Where Do We Go from Here? 5. Reflections on the Role of the Private Sector 6. Elections, Institutions, Democracy 7. Post-Election Realities 8. The Campaign Against "Islamic Terror" 9. Modernity, information, and Governance 10. Total Rejection and Total Acceptance Are Equivalent 11. Mandela, Netanyahu, and Arafat 12. The Theory and Practice of Banning Books and Ideas 13. On Visiting Wadie 14. Uprising Against Oslo 15. Responsibility and Accountability 16. Intellectuals and the Crisis 17. Whom to Talk to 18. The Real Meaning of the Hebron Agreement 19. The Uses of Culture 20. Loss of Precision 21. The Context of Arafat's American Visit 22. Deir Yassin Recalled 23. Thirty Years After 24. The Debate Continues 25. The Next Generation? 26. Are There No Limits to Corruption? 27. Reparations reparations, payments or other compensation offered as an indemnity for loss or damage. Although the term is used to cover payments made to Holocaust survivors and to Japanese Americans interned during World War II in so-called relocation camps (and used as well to : Power and Conscience? 28. Bombs and Bulldozers 29. Strategies of Hope 30. Israel at a Loss 31. Bases for Coexistence 32. Iraq and the Middle East Crisis 33. Isaiah Berlin: An Afterthought 34. Palestine and Israel: A Fifty-Year Perspective 35. The Challenge of Israel: Fifty years On 36. The Problem of Inhumanity in·hu·man·i·ty  
n. pl. in·hu·man·i·ties
1. Lack of pity or compassion.

2. An inhuman or cruel act.


inhumanity
Noun

pl -ties

1.
 37. Gulliver in the Middle East 38. Making History: Constructing Reality 39. Scenes from Palestine 40. End of the Peace Process, or Beginning Something Else 41. Art, Culture, and Nationalism 42. Fifty Years of Dispossession 43. New History, Old Ideas 44. The Other Wilaya 45. Breaking the Deadlock: A Third way 46. The Final Stage 47. The End of the Interim Arrangements 48. Incitement in·cite  
tr.v. in·cit·ed, in·cit·ing, in·cites
To provoke and urge on: troublemakers who incite riots; inciting workers to strike. See Synonyms at provoke.
 49. West Bank Diary 50. Truth and Reconciliation 51. A Tragedy in the Making 52. What Can Separation Mean? 53. Overdue Protest 54. Waiting 55. The Right of Return, At Last 56. South Lebanon and After 57. A Final Summit? 58. One More Chance 59. The End of Oslo.

The Edward Said Reader. Eds. Moustafa Bayoumi and Andrew Rubin. NY: Vintage Books, 2000.

Introduction by Moustafa Bayoumi and Andrew Rubin.

Part I: Beginnings.

Part II: Orientalism and After.

Part III: Late Styles.

Part IV: Spoken Words: An Interview with Edward Said.

Power, Politics, and Culture: Interviews with Edward W. Said. NY: Pantheon, 2001.

Introduction by Gauri Viswanathan.

Part One: Performance and Criticism:

1. Beginnings 2. In the Shadow of the West 3. Over-Lapping Territories: The World, the Text and the Critic 4. Literary Theory at the Crossroads of Public Life 5. Criticism, Culture, and Performance 6. Criticism and the Art of Politics 7. Wild Orchids and Trotsky 8. Culture and Imperialism 9. Orientalism and After 10. Edward Said: Between Two Cultures 11. Peoples' Rights and Literature 12. Language, History, and the Production of Knowledge 13. I've Always Learnt During Class.

Part Two: Scholarship and Activism:

14. Can an Arab and a Jewish State Coexist? 15. Scholars, Media, and the Middle East 16. An Exile's Exile 17. American Intellectuals and Middle East Politics 18. The Need for Self-Appraisal 19. A Formula for More Husseins 20. Palestinian Voices in the US 21. The Intellectuals and the War 22. What People in the US Know About Islam is a Stupid Cliche 23. Europe and Its Others: An Arab Perspective 24. Symbols versus Substance: A Year after the Declaration of Principles 25. The Road Less Traveled 26. Returning to Ourselves 27. A State, Yes, But Not Just for Palestinians 28. Orientalism, Arab Intellectuals, Marxism, and Myth in Palestinian History 29. My Right of Return.

Culture and Resistance: Conversations with Edward Said [With David Barsamian]. Cambridge: South End P, 2003.

Introduction (by David Barsamian) 1. A One-State Solution; Intifada 2000 2. The Palestinian Uprising 3. What They Want is my Silence 4. Origins of Terrorism 5. A Palestinian Perspective on the Conflict with Israel 6. At the Rendezvous of Victory.

Freud and the Non-European. London: Verso ver·so  
n. pl. ver·sos
1. A left-hand page of a book or the reverse side of a leaf, as opposed to the recto.

2. The back of a coin or medal.
, 2003.

Introducing Edward Said (by Christopher Bollas) 1. Freud and the Non-European: Edward Said 2. Introducing Jacqueline Rose: Christopher Bollas 3. Response to Edward Said: Jacqueline Rose.

Humanism and Democratic Criticism. NY: Columbia UP, 2004.

1. Humanism's Sphere 2. The Changing Bases of Humanistic Study and Practice 3. The Return to Philology 4. Introduction to Erich Auerbach's Mimesis mimesis /mi·me·sis/ (mi-me´sis) the simulation of one disease by another.mimet´ic

mi·me·sis
n.
1. The appearance of symptoms of a disease not actually present, often caused by hysteria.
 5. The Public Role of Writers and Intellectuals.

From Oslo to Iraq and the Road Map [Essays originally published in Al-Hayat, Al-Ahram Weekly, and the London Review of Books between December 2000 and July 2003]. NY: Pantheon, 2004.

Foreword by Tony Judt.

Part One: The Second Intifada begins, Clinton's Failure:

1. Palestinians under Siege 2. The Tragedy Deepens 3. American Elections: System or Farce 4. Trying Again and Again 5. Where is Israel Going? 6. The Only Alternative 7. Freud, Zionism, and Vienna 8. Time to Turn to the Other Front 9. These are the Realities 10. Thinking about Israel 11. Defiance, Dignity, and the Rule of Dogma 12. Enemies of the State 13. Sharpening the Axe 14. The Price of Camp David 15. Occupation is the Atrocity 16. Propaganda and War.

Part Two: September 11, the War on Terror This article is about U.S. actions, and those of other states, after September 11, 2001. For other conflicts, see Terrorism.

The War on Terror (also known as the War on Terrorism
, the West Bank, and Gaza Reinvaded:

17. Collective Passion 18. Backlash, Backtrack 19. Adrift in Similarity 20. A Vision to Lift the Spirit 21. Suicidal Ignorance 22. Israel's Dead End 23. Emerging Alternatives in Palestine 24. The Screw Turns, Again 25. Thoughts about America 26. What Price Oslo? 27. Thinking Ahead 28. What Has Israel Done? 29. Crisis for American Jews 30. Palestinian Elections Now 31. One-Way Street 32. Slow Death: Punishment by Detail 33. Arab Disunity dis·u·ni·ty  
n. pl. dis·u·ni·ties
Lack of unity.

Noun 1. disunity - lack of unity (usually resulting from dissension)
 and Factionalism 34. Low Point of Powerlessness.

Part Three: Israel, Iraq, and the United States:

35. Israel, Iraq, and the United States 36. Europe versus America 37. Misinformation mis·in·form  
tr.v. mis·in·formed, mis·in·form·ing, mis·in·forms
To provide with incorrect information.



mis
 about Iraq 38. Immediate Imperatives 39. An Unacceptable Helplessness 40. A Monument to Hypocrisy 41. Who is in Charge? 42. A Stupid War 43. What is Happening to the United States? 44. The Arab Condition 45. Archaeology of the Road Map 46. Dignity and Solidarity.

Afterword by Wadie E. Said.

On Late Style. Ed. Michael Wood. (Forthcoming in Spring 2006; tentative title.)

II. Edited Books (arranged chronologically):

The Arabs Today. Cleveland: Follet Publishers, 1972. Includes an introduction by Edward Said.

Literature and Society. Baltimore: John Hopkins, 1980. (Edited, with a Preface and an article, "Molestation molestation n. the crime of sexual acts with children up to the age of 18, including touching of private parts, exposure of genitalia, taking of pornographic pictures, rape, inducement of sexual acts with the molester or with other children, and variations of these  and Authority," by Edward Said).

Kipling, Rudyard. Kim. London, Penguin: 1987. (Edited, with an Introduction and Notes by Edward Said. Introduction later appears in Culture and Imperialism).

Blaming the Victims: Spurious Scholarship and the Palestinian Question [Edited with Christopher Hitchens]. London: Verso, 1988.

Introduction: Conspiracy of Praise: The Essential Terrorist; Michael Walzer's Exodus and Revolution: A Canaanite Reading; A Profile of the Palestinian People.

III. Co-authored Books (arranged chronologically):

A Profile of the Palestinian People [Collectively written with Ibrahim Abu Lughod, Janet L. Abu-Lughod, Muhammed Hallaj, Elia Zureik]. Chicago: Palestine Human Rights Campaign, 1983.

Chapter One: History and Political Development:

I. Early History II. Zionism III. The British Mandate.

Chapter Two: Political Status and Organization of Palestinians Today:

I. Palestinian National Organization II. Political Activity in Countries of Residence and Dispersion III. Effect of the 1967 War.

Chapter Three: The PLO After the 1967 War:

I. Political Aims II. Structure of the PLO III. Effect of Israeli Assault on Lebanon.

Chapter Four: Demographic Circumstances:

I. Present Demography II. Fragmentation of the Palestinian Community.

Chapter Five: Socio-economic Circumstances:

Methods of Control. Economic Circumstances. Education.

Conclusion

After the Last Sky: Palestinian Lives [With Jean Mohr]. NY: Pantheon, 1986.

Introduction: Palestinian Lives; States; Interiors; Emergence; Past and Future; Postscript: The Fall of Beirut.

Nationalism, Colonialism, and Literature [With Terry Eagleton and Frederic Jameson]. Minneapolis: Minnesota UP, 1990. (Said's essay is entitled "Yeats and Decolonization").

Acts of Aggression: Policing Rogue States [With Noam Chomsky and Ramsey Clark]. NY: Seven Stories P, 1999. (Said's essay [Chapter One] is entitled "Apocalypse Now").

Mona Hatoum: The Entire World as a Foreign Land [With Sheena Wagstaf]. London: Tate Gallery Pub., 2000. (Said's essay is entitled "The Art of Displacement: Mona Hatoum's Logic of Irreconcilables,").

Parallels and Paradoxes: Explorations in Music and Society [With Daniel Barenboim]. NY: Pantheon, 2002. (Edited by Ara Guzelimian).

Introduction by Edward Said

Chapter One:

A Question of Place; Rehearsal Styles; The Weimer Workshop; National Identity and Interpretation; Globalism glob·al·ism  
n.
A national geopolitical policy in which the entire world is regarded as the appropriate sphere for a state's influence.



glob
 and Partition; An Audition with Wilhelm Furtwangler.

Chapter Two:

The Singularity of Performance; Ephemerality of Sound; The Score and Literary Text as Absolute; The Psychology of Tonality tonality (tōnăl`ĭtē), in music, quality by which all tones of a composition are heard in relation to a central tone called the keynote or tonic. ; Composers, Writers, and Society, Art and Censorship; Detail is All; Timing and the Oslo Accord.

Chapter Three:

Art, Politics, and Institutions; On Mentors; A Style of Conducting' The Importance of Extremes; The Art of Transition; Space and Tone.

Chapter Four:

Flexibility of Tempo; The Color and Weight of Sound; The Open Pit and Bayreuth; Adorno and Wagner; National Socialism and Wagner; Manipulation and Yielding; The Question of German Art.

Chapter Five:

What is Authenticity Now; Interpretation in Text and Music; Past and Contemporary Masters; A Musically Literate Listener; Modernism and Inaccessibility.

Chapter Six:

Organic Beethhoven: Symphonies and Concertos; Music of the Social Realm; Long Crescendo versus Subito su·bi·to  
adv. Music
Quickly; suddenly. Used chiefly as a direction.



[Italian, from Latin subit, from neuter ablative sing.
 Piano; Music and the Line of Most Resistance.

"Germans, Jews, and Music" by Daniel Barenboim.

"Barenboim and the Wagner Taboo" by Edward Said.

Afterword by Ara Guzelimian.

IV. Articles, Introductions, and Other Writings (a selection arranged chronologically):

"Record and Reality: Nostromo." Approaches to the Twentieth Century Novel. Ed. John Unterecker. NY: Thomas Y. Cromwell, 1965. 108-52.

Erich Auerbach. "Philology and Weltliteratur." The Centenial Review 13.1 (Winter 1967): 1-17. (Co-translated with Introduction).

"Narrative: Quest for Origins and the Discovery of the Mausoleum mausoleum (môsəlē`əm), a sepulchral structure or tomb, especially one of some size and architectural pretension, so called from the sepulcher of that name at Halicarnassus, Asia Minor, erected (c.352 B.C. ." Salmagundi 12 (Spring 1970): 63-75.

"The Arab Portrayed." The Arab-Israeli Confrontation of June 1967: An Arab Perspective. Ed. Ibrahim Abu-Lughod. Evanston, IL: Northwestern U, 1970. 1-9.

"Linguistics and the Archaeology of Mind." International Philosophical Quarterly XI.1 (1971): 104-34.

"Molestation and Authority in Narrative Fiction." Aspects of Narrative. Ed. J. Hillis Miller J. Hillis Miller (born March 5, 1928) is an American literary critic who has been heavily influenced by—and who has heavily influenced—deconstruction. Life
Joseph Hillis Miller was born in Newport News, Virginia. He is the son of J. Hillis Miller, Sr.
. NY: Columbia UP, 1971. 47-68.

"A Response to Ihab Hassan." Diacritics This article is about the academic journal. For the accent mark, see Diacritic.

diacritics is an academic journal founded in 1971 at Cornell University.
 III.1 (Spring 1973): 53-56.

"Contemporary Fiction and Criticism." TriQuarterly 33 (Spring 1975): 231-56.

"The Palestinians and American Policy." AAUG AAUG Association of Acorn User Groups  Information Paper 17 (1976): 13-22.

"The Idea of Palestine." MERIP MERIP Middle East Research and Information Project  Reports 8.7 (September 1978): 3-11.

"Irangate: A Many-Sided Crisis." Journal of Palestine Studies The Journal of Palestine Studies was established in 1971. It is published and distributed by University of California Press on behalf of the Institute for Palestine Studies. The current editor is Rashid Khalidi of Columbia University.  16.4 (Summer 1987): 27-49.

"Figures, Configurations, Transfigurations "Transfigurations" is the title of an episode from the third season of . Plot
The Enterprise discovers a crashed escape pod in an unexplored star system. Investigating, they find there is one critically injured passenger in the pod, and the crew brings him aboard the ship.
." Race and Class 32.1 (1990): 1-16.

"Imperialism and After: Europe, the US, and the Rest of Us." A Window of Europe: The Lothian Europian European Lectures 1992. Ed. Geraldine Prince. Edinburgh: Canongate P, 1993.

"Introduction." Donald Mitchell. The Language of Modern Music. London: Faber & Faber, 1993.

"Preface." Samir Khalaf. Beirut Reclaimed: Reflections on Urban Design and the Restoration of Civility. Beirut: Dar al Nahar, 1993.

"Not All the Way to the Tigers: Britten's Death in Venice Death in Venice

aging successful author loses his lifelong self-discipline in his love for a beautiful Polish boy. [Ger. Lit: Death in Venice]

See : Homosexuality
." On Mahler and Britten: Essays in Honour of Donald Mitchell on His Seventieth Birthday. Ed. Philip Reed. Woodbridge, Suffolk: Boydell P, 1995.

"On Jean Genet's Late Works." Imperialism and Theatre. Ed. J. Ellen. London: Routeledge, 1995. 230-42.

"Orientalism, an Afterword." Raritan: A Quarterly Review 14.3 (Winter 1995): 32-59.

"Preface." Hanna Mikhail. Politics and Revelation: Mawaradi and After. Edinburgh: Edinburgh UP, 1995.

"Projecting Jerusalem." Journal of Palestine Studies XXV.1 (Autumn 1995): 5-14.

"The Limits of the Artistic Imagination, and the Secular Intellectual." Macalester International 3 (Spring 1996).

"Two Commentaries on Great Expectations: From Deconstruction to Postcolonialism." Charles Dickens. Great Expections. Ed. Janice Carlisle. NY: St. Martin's P, 1996.

"The Arab in American Films and Books of the 1970s." Essays in Honor of Louis Morcos. Ed. Mary Massoud. Cairo: Ain Shams U, 1998. 147-52.

"The Franco-American Dialogue: A Late-Twentieth-Century Reassessment." Traveling Theory: France and the United States. Eds. Ieme van der Poel and Sophie Bertho. Madison, NJ: Farleigh Dickinson, 1999.

"Introduction." Serene Husseini Shahid Serene Husseini Shahid (Arabic: سيرين حُسيني شهيد, French: Sirine Husseini Shahid, b. . Jerusalem Memories. Beirut: Naufal, 1999.

"No Reconciliation Allowed." Letters of Transit: Reflections on Exile, Identity, Language, and Loss. Ed. Andre Aciman. NY: New P, 1999. 87-114.

"Palestine: Memory, Invention, and Space." The Landscape of Palestine: Equivocal Poetry. Eds. Abu-Lughod, Heacock, and Nashef. Birzeit: Birzeit U Publications, 1999.

"An Unresolved Paradox." A Dialogue in Clay. Prestbury, UK: Artizana, 1999. 8-10.

"Glenn Gould, the Virtuoso as Intellectual." Raritan 20.1 (Summer 2000): 1-16.

"Foreword." Mourid Barghouti. I Saw Ramallah. Trans. Ahdaf Soueif. Cairo: AUC AUC

area under curve
 Press, 2000.

"Afterword: The Consequences of 1948." The War for Palestine: Rewriting the History of 1948. Eds. Eugene Rogan and Avi Shlaim. London: Cambridge UP, 2001. 206-19.

"The Book, Critical Performance, and the Future of Education." Pretexts: Literary and Cultural Studies 10.1 (July 2001): 9-19.

"Captain Ahab in Pursuit of Moby Dick." Beauty for Ashes. Ed. John Farina. NY: The Crossroad Publishing Company, 2001.

"Introduction: The Right of Return at Last." Palestinian Refugees: The Right of Return. Ed. Naseer Aruri. London: Pluto P, 2001. 1-6.

"Paradise Lost." The Best American Travel Writing 2001. Ed. Paul Theroux. NY: Houghton Miflin, 2001. 276-85.

"Adorno as Lateness Itself." Adorno: A Critical Reader. Eds. Nigel Gibson and Andrew Rubin. London: Blackwell, 2002. 193-208.

"Andalusia's Journey." Travel and Leisure (December 2002).

"In Conversation with Neeladri Bhattacharya, Suvir Kaul, and Ania Loomba." Relocating Postcolonialism. Eds. David Theo Goldberg David Theo Goldberg, PhD was born and raised in South Africa, where he later received degrees in philosophy and economics from the University of Capetown. He also holds a PhD in philosophy from City University of New York.  and Ato Quayson. Oxford: Blackwell Publishing, 2002.

"A Just Peace." How Long O Lord? Eds. Maurine and Robert Tobin. Cambridge, MA: Cowley Publications, 2002. 239-58.

"Dignity, Solidarity, and the Penal Code." The Politics of Anti-Semitism. Eds. Alexander Cockburn and Jeffrey St. Clair Jeffrey St. Clair (born 1959 in Indianapolis, Indiana)[1] is an investigative journalist, writer and editor. He is the co-editor, with Alexander Cockburn, of the political newsletter CounterPunch, and a contributing editor to the monthly magazine . Oakland: AK Press, 2003: 151-172.

"Homage to Joe Sacco." Joe Sacco. Palestine. London: Jonathan Cape, 2003. i-v.

"Orientalism 25 Years Later: Worldly Humanism v. the Empire-builders." Counterpunch (Aug 3, 2003).

"A New Current in Palestine." Live from Palestine: International and Palestinian Direct Action Against the Israeli Occupation. Eds. Nancy Stohlman and Laurieanne Aladin. Cambridge, MA: South End P, 2003.

"Thoughts on Late Style." London Review of Books 26.15 (August 2004): 3-7.

"Memory, Inequality, and Power: Palestine and the Universality of Human Rights." Alif 24 (2004): 15-33.

"Orientalism Once More." Development and Change 35.5 (2004): 869-79.

"On the University." Alif 25 (2005): 26-36.

V. Periodicals to which Said Contributed Regularly (arranged alphabetically):

--Al-Ahram Weekly. <http://weekly.ahram.org.eg>.

--Dawn. <http://www.dawn.com>.

--The Guardian. <http://www.guardian.co.uk>.

--London Review of Books. <www.lrb.co.uk>.

--The Nation. <http://www.thenation.com>.

VI. Documentary Films (arranged alphabetically):

--Bruce, Charles, dir. In Search of Palestine. BBC BBC
 in full British Broadcasting Corp.

Publicly financed broadcasting system in Britain. A private company at its founding in 1922, it was replaced by a public corporation under royal charter in 1927.
, 1998.

--Dibb, Michael, dir. The Last Interview. ICA Ica (ē`kä), city (1993 pop. 108,724), capital of Ica dept., SW Peru, on the Pan-American Highway. It is a commercial center for the cotton, wool, and wine produced in the region. There are several summer resorts nearby. , 2004.

--Dunlop, Geoff, dir. The Shadow of the West. Landmark Films, 1985.

--Hamon, Emmanual, dir. Selves and Others: A Portrait of Edward Said. Warnip Films, 2003.

--Jhally, Sut, dir. Edward Said: On Orientalism. MEF MEF Marine Expeditionary Force
MEF Metro Ethernet Forum
MEF Ministerio de Economía y Finanzas (Spanish)
MEF Mobile Entertainment Forum
MEF Middle East Forum (think tank) 
, 1998.

--Jhally, Sut, dir. Edward Said: The Myth of 'The Clash of Civilizations The Clash of Civilizations is a theory, proposed by political scientist Samuel P. Huntington, that people's cultural and religious identities will be the primary source of conflict in the post-Cold War world. .' MEF, 1998.

VII. Books on Said (arranged alphabetically by author):

Ahluwalia, Pal and Bill Ashcroft. Edward Said. NY: Routledge, 2001.

Ansell-Pearson, Keith, Benita Parry and Judith Squires, eds. Cultural Readings of Imperialism: Edward Said and the Gravity of History. NY: St. Martin's P, 1997.

Aruri, Naseer and Muhammed A. Shuraydi, eds. Revising Culture, Reinventing Peace: The Influence of Edward W. Said. NY: Olive Branch P, 2001.

Ashcroft, Bill and Hussein Kadhim, eds. Edward Said and the Post-Colonial. Huntington, NY: Nova Science, 2001.

Bhabha, Homi K. and W. J. T. Mitchell W. J. T. Mitchell (A.K.A. "widget") is Gaylord Donnelley Distinguished Service professor of English and Art History at the University of Chicago. He is also the editor of Critical Inquiry, and contributes to the journal October. , eds. Edward Said: Continuing the Conversation. Chicago: U of Chicago P, 2005.

Bove, Paul A. Edward Said and the Work of the Critic: Speaking Truth to Power. Durham: Duke UP, 2000.

Conway, George. A Responsible Complicity: Neo-Colonial Power-Knowledge and the Work of Foucault, Said, Spivak. Ann Arbor, MI: Chadwyck-Healey UMI UMI University Microfilms International
UMI United States Minor Outlying Islands (ISO Country code)
UMI University of Miami
UMI Universal Management Infrastructure (IBM) 
 Dissertation Services, 2003.

Hart, William. Edward Said and the Religious Effects of Culture. Cambridge: Cambridge UP, 2000.

Hussein, Abdirahman A. Edward Said: Criticism and Society. London: Verso, 2002.

Kennedy, Valerie. Edward Said: A Critical Introduction. Oxford, UK; Malden, MA: Polity P, 2000.

Marrouchi, Mustapha. Edward Said at the Limits. Albany: State U of NY P, 2004.

Masalha, Nut, ed. Catastrophe Remembered: Palestine, Israel, and the Internal Refugees: Papers in Memory of Edward W. Said, 1935-2003. London: Zed Books, 2005.

Salusinszky, Imre. Criticism in Society: Interviews with Jacques Derrida, Northrop Frye, Harold Bloom, Geoffrey Hartman, Frank Kermode, Edward Said, Barbara Johnson, Frank Lentricchia, and J. Hillis Miller. NY: Methuen, 1987.

Singh, Amritjit and Bruce G. Johnson. Interviews With Edward W. Said (Conversations With Public Intellectuals Series). Oxford: UP of Mississippi, 2004.

Sprinker, Michael, ed. Edward Said: A Critical Reader. Oxford, UK; Cambridge, MA: Blackwell, 1992.

Walia, Shelley. Edward Said and the Writing of History (Postmodern Encounters). Cambridge, UK: Icon Books, 2001.

Varadharajan, Asha. Exotic Parodies: Subjectivity in Adorno, Said, and Spivak. Minneapolis: U of Minnesota P, 1999.

Williams, Patrick, ed. Edward Said. London: Sage Publications, 200. Vol 1 : Intellectuals and Critics: Positions and Polemics po·lem·ics  
n. (used with a sing. or pl. verb)
1. The art or practice of argumentation or controversy.

2. The practice of theological controversy to refute errors of doctrine.
; Vol 2: Versions of Orientalism; Vol 3: Cultural Forms, Disciplinary Boundaries; Vol 4: Theory and Politics.

VIII. Special Issues of Journals on Said (arranged alphabetically):

--Alif: Journal of Comparative Poetics 25 (2005).

--Arab Studies Quarterly 26.4 (Fall 2004).

--The Arab World Geographer 7.1-2 (2004).

--Boundary 2 25.2 (Summer 1998).

--Critical Inquiry 31.2 (Winter 2005).

--Cultural Critique 57 (Spring 2004).

--Culture, Theory and Critique 45.2 (2004).

--Diacritics: A Review of Contemporary Criticism 6.3 (Fall 1976).

--ISIM (International Institute for the Study of the Modern World) Newsletter 13 (December 2003).

--Journal of Palestinian Studies 33.3 (Spring 2004).

--Social Text 40 (Fall 1994).

IX. Websites amd Electronic Lists Dedicated to Said (arranged alphabetically):

Electronic Said Forum (e-mail list). For subscription contact: <said-admin@aucegypt.edu>.

The Edward Said Archive. <http://www.edwardsaid.org/modules/news>. Comprehensive selection of interviews, news stories, and articles by and about Edward Said.

Truth to Power: A Bibliography of Edward Said Online. <http://www.themargins.net/said.html>. Primary and secondary materials arranged chronologically: introduction in progress.

University of California The University of California has a combined student body of more than 191,000 students, over 1,340,000 living alumni, and a combined systemwide and campus endowment of just over $7.3 billion (8th largest in the United States). , Irvine Library. Bibliography and Reviews of Edward Said's Works. <http://sun3.lib.uci.edu/~scctrAVellek/ said/1970.html>. A bibliographic index of Said's works and offline scholarly reviews of them.
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