Morocco Bound – Disorienting America′s Maghreb, from Casablanca to the Marrakech Express
Autor Brian Edwardsen Limba Engleză Paperback – 27 oct 2005
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780822336440
ISBN-10: 0822336448
Pagini: 376
Ilustrații: 27 illustrations
Dimensiuni: 168 x 235 x 23 mm
Greutate: 0.55 kg
Editura: MD – Duke University Press
ISBN-10: 0822336448
Pagini: 376
Ilustrații: 27 illustrations
Dimensiuni: 168 x 235 x 23 mm
Greutate: 0.55 kg
Editura: MD – Duke University Press
Recenzii
As literary studies in the United States founder between America globalizing and the globe Americanizing, Brian T. Edwardss brilliant analysis of how America becomes worldly for others is a model for future work. Here language-based close readings bring literary criticism and the study of cultural politics together as the author guides us with a sure hand from cold war ideology, through hippie orientalism, postcolonialityonto the threshold of the consequences of globalization seen in a new perspective.Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak, Columbia UniversityMorocco Bound announces a radical departure from contemporary debates on orientalism through an interesting deployment of the concept of circulation in its study of the U.S. encounter with North Africa and through an astute consideration of the ways that American texts translate the North African Arab and Berber other. With this book, postcolonialism, cultural studies, African studies, and American studies will be refreshed and can begin some of the most exciting debates anew.Taieb Belghazi, Mohammed V University, Rabat, MoroccoBy his achieved commitment to working across languages, treating several disciplines and diverse cultural levels (official, mass, avant-garde), and by his disruptive practice of reading Arabic voices together with Anglophones, Brian T. Edwards has produced an exemplary performance of what American studies must become in the twenty-first century.Jonathan Arac, author of The Emergence of American Literary Narrative, 18201860Morocco Bound is a powerful meditation on the question of why the circulation of cultural representations matters
. Given its important critical interventions, Morocco Bound should be a required text for a broad range of readers and scholars in the fields of American studies, postcolonialism, comparative literature, and Middle Eastern Studies.Ali Behdad, Comparative Literature Brian T. Edwards has penned a fundamental book, one that takes an in-depth look at how Americavia both popular culture and the State Departmentdiscovered Morocco, starting with Paul Bowles, moving through Casablanca, and ending with hippies, hashish, and happenings.Rebecca Romani, Al JadidBrian T. Edwards applies the lessons of Edward Saids Orientalism...to an arena whose time has come...It is easy to endorse his collaborative spirit and to join in lamenting what he calls the American heritage of indifference toward the political travails of Moroccans. Diana Wylie , American Historical Review
"As literary studies in the United States founder between America globalizing and the globe Americanizing, Brian T. Edwards's brilliant analysis of how America becomes worldly for others is a model for future work. Here language-based close readings bring literary criticism and the study of cultural politics together as the author guides us with a sure hand from cold war ideology, through 'hippie orientalism,' postcoloniality--onto the threshold of the consequences of globalization seen in a new perspective."--Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak, Columbia University "Morocco Bound announces a radical departure from contemporary debates on orientalism through an interesting deployment of the concept of circulation in its study of the U.S. encounter with North Africa and through an astute consideration of the ways that American texts translate the North African Arab and Berber other. With this book, postcolonialism, cultural studies, African studies, and American studies will be refreshed and can begin some of the most exciting debates anew."--Taieb Belghazi, Mohammed V University, Rabat, Morocco "By his achieved commitment to working across languages, treating several disciplines and diverse cultural levels (official, mass, avant-garde), and by his disruptive practice of reading Arabic voices together with Anglophones, Brian T. Edwards has produced an exemplary performance of what American studies must become in the twenty-first century."--Jonathan Arac, author of The Emergence of American Literary Narrative, 1820-1860 "Morocco Bound is a powerful meditation on the question of why the circulation of cultural representations matters... Given its important critical interventions, Morocco Bound should be a required text for a broad range of readers and scholars in the fields of American studies, postcolonialism, comparative literature, and Middle Eastern Studies."--Ali Behdad, Comparative Literature "Brian T. Edwards has penned a fundamental book, one that takes an in-depth look at how America--via both popular culture and the State Department--"discovered" Morocco, starting with Paul Bowles, moving through Casablanca, and ending with hippies, hashish, and 'happenings.'"--Rebecca Romani, Al Jadid "Brian T. Edwards applies the lesson's of Edward Said's Orientalism...to an arena whose time has come...It is easy to endorse his collaborative spirit and to join in lamenting what he calls the American heritage of indifference toward the political travails of Moroccans." --Diana Wylie , American Historical Review
"As literary studies in the United States founder between America globalizing and the globe Americanizing, Brian T. Edwards's brilliant analysis of how America becomes worldly for others is a model for future work. Here language-based close readings bring literary criticism and the study of cultural politics together as the author guides us with a sure hand from cold war ideology, through 'hippie orientalism,' postcoloniality--onto the threshold of the consequences of globalization seen in a new perspective."--Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak, Columbia University "Morocco Bound announces a radical departure from contemporary debates on orientalism through an interesting deployment of the concept of circulation in its study of the U.S. encounter with North Africa and through an astute consideration of the ways that American texts translate the North African Arab and Berber other. With this book, postcolonialism, cultural studies, African studies, and American studies will be refreshed and can begin some of the most exciting debates anew."--Taieb Belghazi, Mohammed V University, Rabat, Morocco "By his achieved commitment to working across languages, treating several disciplines and diverse cultural levels (official, mass, avant-garde), and by his disruptive practice of reading Arabic voices together with Anglophones, Brian T. Edwards has produced an exemplary performance of what American studies must become in the twenty-first century."--Jonathan Arac, author of The Emergence of American Literary Narrative, 1820-1860 "Morocco Bound is a powerful meditation on the question of why the circulation of cultural representations matters... Given its important critical interventions, Morocco Bound should be a required text for a broad range of readers and scholars in the fields of American studies, postcolonialism, comparative literature, and Middle Eastern Studies."--Ali Behdad, Comparative Literature "Brian T. Edwards has penned a fundamental book, one that takes an in-depth look at how America--via both popular culture and the State Department--"discovered" Morocco, starting with Paul Bowles, moving through Casablanca, and ending with hippies, hashish, and 'happenings.'"--Rebecca Romani, Al Jadid "Brian T. Edwards applies the lesson's of Edward Said's Orientalism...to an arena whose time has come...It is easy to endorse his collaborative spirit and to join in lamenting what he calls the American heritage of indifference toward the political travails of Moroccans." --Diana Wylie , American Historical Review
Notă biografică
Brian T. Edwards is Assistant Professor of English and Comparative Literary Studies at Northwestern University.
Textul de pe ultima copertă
"By his commitment to working across languages, treating several disciplines and diverse cultural levels (official, mass, avant-garde), and by his disruptive practice of reading Arabic voices together with Anglophones, Brian Edwards has produced an exemplary performance of what American Studies must become in the twenty-first century."--Jonathan Arac, author of "The Emergence of American Literary Narrative, 1820-1860"
Descriere
An examination of American Orientalist representations of North Africa from 1942 to 1973