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Gil Anidjar

Department of Middle East and Asian Languages and Cultures

Expertise

Israel, Palestine

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Gil Anidjar teaches in the Department of Middle East and Asian Languages and Cultures and the Department of Religion at Columbia University. He is the author of The Jew, the Arab: A History of the Enemy (Stanford University Press, 2003) and Semites: Race, Religion, Literature (Stanford University Press, 2008).

 

The Latest from Gil Anidjar

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Orientalism's Wake: The Ongoing Politics of a Polemic
Middle East Institute
  • Analysis
  • Orientalism's Wake: The Ongoing Politics of a Polemic

    Originally posted September 2009

    Edward W. Said, who passed away at the age of 67 on September 25, 2003, was a towering “public intellectual” — a man of extraordinary erudition, a path-breaking scholar, and a passionate activist.

    Said was a man of many interests, talents, and accomplishments — pianist, opera critic, newspaper columnist, popular essayist, television celebrity, and public lecturer. From 1963 until his death, he was Professor of English and Comparative Literature at Columbia University.

    August 16, 2012

    Symmetrism
  • Analysis
  • Symmetrism

    “I think one can say this almost without qualification,” writes Edward Said in Orientalism, as he reiterates some basic facts and moves toward a provisional conclusion (p. 204). Said had just explained that Orientalism is “a positive doctrine.” It is “an influential academic tradition,” as well as “an area of concern” (p. 203). As he implies here, and shows throughout his work, Orientalism is a great number of other things, too. It is the deployment of concepts regarded as always already universal such as race, religion, and fanaticism.

    April 17, 2012