"GRANDLY CONCEIVED… URGENTLY WRITTEN AND URGENTLY NEEDED": PRESENTATION FIRST EDITION OF CULTURE AND IMPERIALISM, INSCRIBED BY EDWARD SAID
SAID, Edward W. Culture and Imperialism. London: Chatto & Windus, (1993). Octavo, original brown paper boards, original dust jacket.
First English edition of Said's brilliant look at western literature, uniting his unique "appreciation of a literary text… with the pizzazz and ethical witness of… 'writing to the moment,'" an exceptional presentation copy inscribed on the title page by him, "To dearest C— & D— who were there at the beginning, & stayed to the end—with all my love—Edward."
Said was "an exemplar of American multiculturalism, at home both in Arabic and English, but, as he once put it, 'a man who lived two quite separate lives'…. In Culture and Imperialism, Said argued that 19th- and 20th-century British novelists—even so apparently nonpolitical a writer as Jane Austen—provided a cultural legitimization for colonialism" (New York Times). Attacked by critics, Said argued that Austen, who lived in a slave-owning society, could not be expected "to treat slavery with anything like the passion of an abolitionist or a newly liberated slave." That said, her "aesthetic intellectual complexity" required its own complex analysis. "Almost uniquely Said combines an unrelenting appreciation of a literary text or a piece of music with the pizzazz and ethical witness of what that great Puritan writer Samuel Richardson called 'writing to the moment'" (Guardian). On publication, Culture and Imperialism was praised as "grandly conceived… urgently written and urgently needed" (New York Times Book Review). First English edition, preceded by the same year's American edition.
A fine inscribed copy.