Out Of Place: A Memoir

by Edward W. Said

Paperback, 2000

Status

Available

Call number

LIT.SAE.OPM

Collection

Publication

Granta Books (2000), Edition: New Ed, 320 pages

Description

From one of the most important intellectuals of our time comes an extraordinary story of exile and a celebration of an irrecoverable past. A fatal medical diagnosis in 1991 convinced Edward Said that he should leave a record of where he was born and spent his childhood, and so with this memoir he rediscovers the lost Arab world of his early years in Palestine, Lebanon, and Egypt. Said writes with great passion and wit about his family and his friends from his birthplace in Jerusalem, schools in Cairo, and summers in the mountains above Beirut, to boarding school and college in the United States, revealing an unimaginable world of rich, colorful characters and exotic eastern landscapes. Underscoring all is the confusion of identity the young Said experienced as he came to terms with the dissonance of being an American citizen, a Christian and a Palestinian, and, ultimately, an outsider. Richly detailed, moving, often profound, Out of Place depicts a young man's coming of age and the genesis of a great modern thinker.… (more)

Media reviews

Und Said, der Literaturwissenschaftler, der scharfsinnige Analytiker, der Dekonstrukteur von Mythen und Stereotypen, erweist sich als ein grandioser Erzähler. Man muss nicht gleich, wie Salman Rushdie in einer enthusiastischen Rezension, Proust, Balzac oder Joseph Conrad zum Vergleich heranziehen,
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um zu erkennen, dass "Out of Place", auf deutsch "Am falschen Ort", zu den bemerkenswertesten Autobiographien gehört, die inden letzten Jahrzehnten erschienen sind.
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Awards

Anisfield-Wolf Book Award (Nonfiction — 2000)

Language

Original language

English

Original publication date

1999

Physical description

320 p.

ISBN

1862073708 / 9781862073708

Call number

LIT.SAE.OPM

Library's review

Edward Said experienced both British and American imperialism as the old Arab order crumbled in the late forties and early fifties. This account of his early life reveals the influences that have formed his books, "Orientalism" and "Culture and Imperialism". Edward Said was born in Jerusalem, and
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brought up in Cairo, spending every summer in the Lebanese mountain village of Dhour el Shweir, until he was "banished" to America in 1951. This work is a mixture of emotional archaeology and memory, exploring an essentially irrecoverable past. As ill health sets him thinking about endings, Edward Said returns to his beginnings in this personal memoir of his ferociously demanding "Victorian" father, and his adored, inspiring, yet ambivalent mother.
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Pages

320
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