Edward Sa'id: Exile and the Influence of the Cosmopolitan Ideal

Speaker(s): Terri DeYoung (University of Washington)
In the early 1980s, in the first blush of the excitement generated by the publication of Orientalism, Edward Sa鈥榠d ventured on a meditation on a different subject鈥攅xile鈥攖hat would prove as enduring an intellectual preoccupation for him as charting the structures of colonialism. In his introduction to The World, the Text and the Critic (1983), Sa鈥榠d speaks of his admiration for a passage from Eric Auerbach鈥檚 classic Mimesis (1946) where the great philologist speaks of the value to be found in 鈥渢he ascetic code of willed homelessness鈥 as the best position to adopt for those who wish 鈥渢o earn a proper love for the world鈥 (7). Later in the essay, this formulation becomes the equivalent of a definition for cosmopolitanism, a concept that, for Sa鈥榠d, is inextricably linked to exile. Yet, this definition of cosmopolitanism as a willed ideal rooted in exile, for Sa鈥榠d鈥攐ver his long career and with his many allegiances鈥攔emained an elusive and unstable concept. This lecture will seek to articulate, through engagement with more recent theorists鈥 work on cosmopolitanism, what value Sa鈥榠d鈥檚 reflections on cosmopolitanism can still hold for us.
Terri DeYoung is Professor of Arabic Language and Literature at the University of Washington.
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Sponsors: Abbasi Program in Islamic Studies, Comparative Literature, Division of Literatures, Cultures, and Languages (DLCL), 麻豆高清 Department of Theater & Performance Studies