Humanism as resistance

  • Said Edward W. Columbia University, New York, USA
Keywords: Humanism, American literature

Abstract

Nine years ago wrote an epilogue to Orientalism in which, in trying to clarify what I had said and not said, I highlighted not only the many debates that had arisen since the appearance of my book in 1978, but the way in which a work on the representations of "the East" lent itself to increasing distortion. That this causes me more irony today than irritation shows how much I have aged. The recent deaths of my two great intellectual, political and personal mentors, Eqbal Ahmad and Ibrahim Abu-Lughod, have produced in me, in addition to sadness and feelings of loss, resignation and a kind of stubborn determination to move on. In my memoirs, "Out of Place" (Grijalbo, 2001), I spoke of strange and contradictory worlds in which I was educated and offered readers a detailed account of the circumstances that shaped me in Palestine, Egypt and Lebanon. But it was a very personal text, which stopped just before my years of political engagement, which began after the 1967 war between the Arabs and Israelis.

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

Métricas alternativas

Published
2003-12-31
How to Cite
Edward W., S. (2003). Humanism as resistance. Letras (Lima), 74(105-106), 7-15. https://doi.org/10.30920/letras.74.105-106.1