Edward Said and the Religious Effects of Culture

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This book provides a distinctive account of Edward Said's critique of modern culture by highlighting the religion-secularism distinction on which it is predicated. It refers to religious and secular traditions and to tropes that extend the meaning and reference of religion and secularism in indeterminate ways. It covers Said's heterogeneous corpus--from Joseph Conrad and the Fiction of Autobiography, his first book, to Orientalism, his most influential book, to his recent writings on the Palestinian question. The religion-secularism distinction lies behind Said's cultural criticism, and his notion of intellectual responsibility.

Author(s): William D. Hart
Series: Cambridge Studies in Religion and Critical Thought
Edition: First Edition
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Year: 2000

Language: English
Pages: 252