Unsettling the World: Edward Said and Political Theory

Author:   Jeanne Morefield
Publisher:   Rowman & Littlefield
ISBN:  

9781442260283


Pages:   346
Publication Date:   05 May 2022
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   Out of stock   Availability explained
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Unsettling the World: Edward Said and Political Theory


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Author:   Jeanne Morefield
Publisher:   Rowman & Littlefield
Imprint:   Rowman & Littlefield
Dimensions:   Width: 16.00cm , Height: 3.20cm , Length: 22.80cm
Weight:   0.685kg
ISBN:  

9781442260283


ISBN 10:   1442260289
Pages:   346
Publication Date:   05 May 2022
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Out of stock   Availability explained
The supplier is temporarily out of stock of this item. It will be ordered for you on backorder and shipped when it becomes available.

Table of Contents

Chapter One will introduce Said to a political theory audience who might not be intimately familiar with his work by examining his incalculable impact on postcolonial scholarship. Despite his looming presence in other disciplines, Said’s writing have been largely ignored by political theorists because they don’t fall neatly into the categories of either critical or normative theory. The chapter critiques the way international ethicists de-historicize institutions of international politics and the privileged position by which Western experts are able to diagnose and “solve” the problems of the formerly colonized world. Chapter Two will begin the process of formulating a Saidian response to this form of liberal presentism by looking closely at the promises and challenges of Said’s humanism. The chapter will first interrogate the tension between his support for universal ideas like justice and freedom (most apparent in his refusal to dismiss human rights as “cultural or grammatical things”) and his equally deep commitment to Foucaultian discourse analysis. This combination of worldliness and the provisional, disputable, arguable products of human inquiry compelled Said to situate “critique at the very heart of humanism.” Chapter Three will explore the relationship between a humanism that is explicitly historical, critical and global and Said’s conception of the exilic intellectual. The chapter begins with a brief examination of the role of “exile” in twentieth century political theory more generally. It moves on to examine Said’s conviction that humanist intellectuals engaged in critique must understand themselves as already contaminated by “power, positions, and interests,” a disposition which elicits an ongoing processes of self-reflection that asks the critic to pay close attention to their own subject position vis-à-visthe event/text they are analyzing. Said championed a subject position for the critic rooted in exile. “The intellectual,” he argued, “who considers him or herself to be part of a more general condition affecting the displaced national community is… likely to be a source not of acculturation and adjustment, but rather of volatility and instability.” The chapter will conclude by thinking critically about some of the conceptual problems generated by this approach to exile, such as, the fact that it appears profoundly voluntarist in a way that seems to run counter to Said’s own theory of power. Despite these tensions, the kinds of reflective practices that flow from a position of exile offer a necessary corrective to the unquestioned positionality of liberal internationalism. Chapter Four will explore the kinds of political reflection enabled by exile, focusing on Said’s analysis of language and the way this fine-grained approach to language functions in his explicitly political writings. It will begin with an investigation of Said’s conviction that the self-reflective awareness of the exilic critic entails “a lifelong attentiveness to the words and rhetorics by which language is used by human beings who exist in history,” a disposition he called philological. The chapter will then turn to Said’s political writings to explore this attentiveness to the kinds of communities both engendered and occluded by pro-nouns. Chapter Five will explore the unsettled approach to crisis implicit in Said’s two-pronged approach his exilic humanism. On the one hand, the practice of humanist criticism compels the exilic intellectual to approach perceived crises in international politics from the perspective of language critique, drilling into the space between words to reveal the holes where narrating subjects should be, subjects who – despite their rhetorical invisibility – still daily experience the material violence of a world which refuses to represent them or create the space for them to represent themselves. On the other hand, Said’s critical humanism insists that we engage the kinds of historical analyses that “protect against and forestall the disappearance of the past” which have fallen victim to the discursive press of crisis.[1] Chapter Six draws together the threads of discussion by thinking more broadly about the adequacy of Said’s theory as a counterweight to the international ethics of liberal internationalism. This will include thinking explicitly about those aspects of Said’s work that might frustrate some political theorists: his insistence, for instance, on conceptualizing democracy as a form of critical practice rather than as a type of politics, and his refusal to theorize the foundational logic behind concepts that he values like “justice” and “human rights.” The book concludes by suggesting that it is precisely Said’s relentlessly critical insistence on searching for the hidden “we” behind discourses of democracy, justice, and human rights that makes his humanism particularly able to puncture the presentist logic behind so many contemporary approaches to international politics, thus bringing the past that cannot be acknowledged, and the collective subjects who cannot be represented, back into the center of analysis. [1] Said, HDC, 141.

Reviews

Jeanne Morefield's Unsettling the World is an original and outstanding interpretation of Edward Said's work and of its contribution and importance to the field of political theory. Jeanne Morefield's Unsettling the World: Edward Said and Political Theory extends her already impressive body of work on the nature and function of empire and imperialism into a radical turning point. In Said she has found a kindred soul not just to interpret the world, as Marx had urged, but to change it. With this master stroke Morefield relocates us in ""the middle of a raging cyclone"" as she puts it which is Said's way of recasting the world not despite but against empire. The result however is not just rereading Said against the grain of the current imperial meltdown. She borrows from Said to build a whole new moral and imaginative citadel from which not just to reimagine but rebuild the world. In Said, Morefield detects and praises what she performs with uncommon verve and vitality for a whole new generation of critical thinking. Unsettling the World advances a riveting and revelatory account of Edward Said's political thought. Probing the complexity, contradictions, and polemics that have led other commentators to misjudge Said's anticolonial humanism, Morefield situates Said's work in the company of Aimé Césaire, Frantz Fanon, and C. L. R. James and demonstrates why political theorists cannot afford to neglect Said's profound analysis of the entanglements of race, empire, and modern political ideals.


"Jeanne Morefield's Unsettling the World is an original and outstanding interpretation of Edward Said's work and of its contribution and importance to the field of political theory. --James Tully, Professor Emeritus, University of Victoria Jeanne Morefield's Unsettling the World: Edward Said and Political Theory extends her already impressive body of work on the nature and function of empire and imperialism into a radical turning point. In Said she has found a kindred soul not just to interpret the world, as Marx had urged, but to change it. With this master stroke Morefield relocates us in ""the middle of a raging cyclone"" as she puts it which is Said's way of recasting the world not despite but against empire. The result however is not just rereading Said against the grain of the current imperial meltdown. She borrows from Said to build a whole new moral and imaginative citadel from which not just to reimagine but rebuild the world. In Said, Morefield detects and praises what she performs with uncommon verve and vitality for a whole new generation of critical thinking. --Hamid Dabashi, Columbia University, author of On Said: Remembrance of Things Past Unsettling the World advances a riveting and revelatory account of Edward Said's political thought. Probing the complexity, contradictions, and polemics that have led other commentators to misjudge Said's anticolonial humanism, Morefield situates Said's work in the company of Aimé Césaire, Frantz Fanon, and C. L. R. James and demonstrates why political theorists cannot afford to neglect Said's profound analysis of the entanglements of race, empire, and modern political ideals. --Lawrie Balfour, University of Virginia"


"Jeanne Morefield's Unsettling the World is an original and outstanding interpretation of Edward Said's work and of its contribution and importance to the field of political theory. --James Tully, Professor Emeritus, University of Victoria Jeanne Morefield's Unsettling the World: Edward Said and Political Theory extends her already impressive body of work on the nature and function of empire and imperialism into a radical turning point. In Said she has found a kindred soul not just to interpret the world, as Marx had urged, but to change it. With this master stroke Morefield relocates us in ""the middle of a raging cyclone"" as she puts it which is Said's way of recasting the world not despite but against empire. The result however is not just rereading Said against the grain of the current imperial meltdown. She borrows from Said to build a whole new moral and imaginative citadel from which not just to reimagine but rebuild the world. In Said, Morefield detects and praises what she performs with uncommon verve and vitality for a whole new generation of critical thinking. --Hamid Dabashi, Columbia University, author of On Said: Remembrance of Things Past Unsettling the World advances a riveting and revelatory account of Edward Said's political thought. Probing the complexity, contradictions, and polemics that have led other commentators to misjudge Said's anticolonial humanism, Morefield situates Said's work in the company of Aim� C�saire, Frantz Fanon, and C. L. R. James and demonstrates why political theorists cannot afford to neglect Said's profound analysis of the entanglements of race, empire, and modern political ideals. --Lawrie Balfour, University of Virginia"


Author Information

Jeanne Morefield is professor of politics at Whitman College. She is author of Empires without Imperialism: Anglo American Decline and the Politics of Deflection (Oxford UP, 2014) and Covenants without Swords: Idealist Liberalism and the Spirit of Empire (Princeton UP, 2005).

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