Chapter One, “Writing at a Distance: Exile, Loss, and Critique.”
This chapter explores the sometimes-unnerving contradictions of
Said’s exilic disposition, from his reflections on his own life in
exile to his discordant prose style, focusing on the productive
criticism that he believes flow from this unsettling disclosure. It
focuses on Said’s 1982 essay, “Secular Criticism” and explores his
approach to analyzing filiative and affiliative modes of
ideological connection. The chapter concludes by turning from
Said’s theoretical writing about exile to his exilic writing in
1984’s After the Last Sky which offers a powerful glimpse into the
attached and detached mode of seeing at work in Said’s exilic
orientation. It also provides a fuller sense of how this
orientation twins a critique of power, nationhood, and exclusion
with a deep sympathy for the ties that bind love to home, love to
loss, and love to loss of home.
Chapter Two, “A Cluster of Flowing Currents: Theory Unresolved and
Groundless.” This chapter foc
Jeanne Morefield is associate professor of Political Theory and fellow at New College, University of Oxford. She is also a non-residential fellow at the Quincy Institute for Responsible Statecraft, Washington DC. She is author of Empires without Imperialism: Anglo American Decline and the Politics of Deflection (Oxford UP, 2014) and Covenants without Swords: Idealist Liberalism and the Spirit of Empire (Princeton UP, 2005).
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