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Arab Intellectuals And American Power Edward Said Charles Malik And The Us In The Middle East M D Walhout

  • SKU: BELL-50235750
Arab Intellectuals And American Power Edward Said Charles Malik And The Us In The Middle East M D Walhout
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Arab Intellectuals And American Power Edward Said Charles Malik And The Us In The Middle East M D Walhout instant download after payment.

Publisher: I.B. Tauris
File Extension: PDF
File size: 8.86 MB
Author: M. D. Walhout
ISBN: 9780755634149, 9780755634170, 0755634144, 0755634179
Language: English
Year: 2021

Product desciption

Arab Intellectuals And American Power Edward Said Charles Malik And The Us In The Middle East M D Walhout by M. D. Walhout 9780755634149, 9780755634170, 0755634144, 0755634179 instant download after payment.

Edward Said, the famous Palestinian American scholar and activist, was one of the twentieth century’s most iconic public intellectuals, whose pioneering and – to some – controversial work on Orientalism shaped Middle Eastern and postcolonial studies and beyond. But how exactly did he arrive at his famous maxim to ‘speak truth to power’?
This dual biographical study examines the lives of Edward Said and the eminent Lebanese philosopher and diplomat Charles Malik, a distant relative 30 years his senior whom Said knew from childhood as “Uncle Charles.” To Said, Malik was no ordinary relative; in his memoir, he called Malik “the great negative intellectual lesson of my life”, and was to describe him as “an ideal as I was growing up” only to later claim Malik “went through an ugly transformation that I could never come to terms with”. M.D. Walhout charts the development of these two remarkable figures, reconstructing in the process the way in which American power in the Middle East came to have a defining effect on Arab intellectuals in the twentieth century. Exploring issues of religion and nationalism, Walhout shows how Said came to reject much of what Malik stood for: Christian faith, hardline anti-Communism and the benign nature of American power. He argues that the example of Malik was instrumental in the development of Said’s later belief that the true vocation of the intellectual was not to compromise with power, but to resist it.

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