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An intimate account of Edward Saïd's life and thought Edward Said is a personal, literary portrait of one of the twentieth century’s most influential scholars, written by his close friend and confidante. Here, Lebanese novelist and essayist Dominique Eddé offers a fascinating and fresh presentation of his oeuvre from his earliest writings on Joseph Conrad to his most famous texts, Orientalism and Culture and Imperialism. Eddé weaves together accounts of the genesis and content of Said’s work, his intellectual development, and her own reflections and personal recollections of their friendship, which began in 1979 and lasted until Said’s death in 2003. In this intimate and searching portrait of Said’s thought, Eddé continues to maintain their dialogue despite his death, trying to make peace with the loss of a collaborator with whom she still wants to talk and disagree. Bringing together personal reflection and theoretical innovation, reflective mourning and immediate argument, Eddé has written a testament to a great intellectual passion. Both specialists of Said’s work and newcomers will find much to learn in this rich portrait of one of the twentieth century’s most important intellectuals.
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This is not a novel.
It is, however, a pretty great book. I come at it from a place of not knowing much about Said, and nothing at all about Edd??. I still loved it–lots of intricate analyses of complex problems, summed up at times very nicely. And some windows into both Said and Edd??. My favorite stuff was about his ideas' relationship to those of Camus and Sartre (though if you're going to use them in this book, why not deBeauvoir, too?), but it was nice to see Vico represented some too. And I learned quite a bit about Joseph Conrad.
It's also a lovely slice of how a person grieves.