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About ArmaVirumque ( AHR-mah wih-ROOM-kweh) In the Aeneid, the Roman poet Virgil sang of "arms and a man" (Arma virumque cano). Month in and month out, The New Criterion expounds with great clarity and wit on the art, culture, and political controversies of our times. With postings of reviews, essays, links, recs, and news, Armavirumque seeks to continue this mission in accordance with the timetable of the digital age. Recent posts
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Sep 26, 2003 06:59 AM Edward Said: ’The truth was rather different’
Edward Said, who has died from leukemia at 67, was the Palestine-born academic superstar at Columbia University whose book Orientalism (1978) gave us the unlovely discipline of "post-colonial studies," one of the most popular and hermetic forms of victim studies now regnant in the academy. His ferocious anti-Israeli position helped burnish his image among left-wing academics (which is to say, all but a tiny minority of that brotherhood) even as it led Yassir Arafat to pick him to negotiate with Secretary of State George Schultz in 1988. Said had been ill from the early 1990s, but illness did nothing to diminish his radicalism. In 2000, on a trip to the Middle East, he took time out to throw stones at an Israeli guardhouse, a widely reported gesture that went uncensured by the academic establishment. Said was a . . . well, "fabulist" is a pleasant-sounding word for "liar. " He made up an oppressed childhood for himself, replete with Israeli perfidy and refugee status. But the truth, as this obituary in The Daily Telegraph reports, "was rather different." In 1999, research by an Israeli academic, Justus Reid Weiner, determined that the account which Said had given of his own victimhood was selective and highly misleading. His family had in fact - as Said later acknowledged - left Jerusalem when he was two, and he was never a refugee.In 1999, Keith Windschuttle wrote a devastating essay about the cult of Said for The New Criterion. Read it here.
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