People's Democracy(Weekly Organ of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) |
Vol.
XXVII
No. 40 October 05, 2003 |
Edward
Said, 1935-2003
EDWARD
Said died in New York on September 25, 2003. His last years were marked by a
prolonged and dogged fight with Leukaemia.
In a way what went on in the battlefield of his body is reminiscent of
the bitter struggle he waged against imperial domination throughout his
distinguished career.
The
foremost political issue he continuously sought to bring into the arena of
public discussion was the cause of Palestine and its people. It is not generally
known how much opprobrium, injustice, insult and threat was directed
against Said for his spirited, eloquent and untiring efforts on behalf of his
people. He was well-settled in the United States, a respectable academic, one of
the pillars of the alternative intellectual establishment, an international
celebrity who would be adored for his very difference. The west is continuously
looking for safe deviance which can be fitted into cosy slots and which would
legitimise the overarching dominance of mainstream intellectual and cultural
productions. But Said was anything
but safe. A thorn in the flesh of the imperialist-zionist consensus, an
indefatigable campaigner for the liberation of Palestine, a defender of the
rights of refugees and migrants, he stood out in America as a man who would not
be cowed or corrupted into complicity. Said had his differences with various
strands of political leadership in the Arab world, and he was a never a part of
the Palestinian or Arab community in the full sense of the term; he was a
secular, democratic, independent-minded participant in the cause against
imperial hegemony, bitterly critical of regressive Islamic positions, trying
continuously to evolve a rational, humane, equitable order of peoples living
together, continuously frustrated by entrenched bigotry, oppression and
injustice. Two major books – The Question of Palestine (1980), and After
the Last Sky (1986) – and a great many articles described the moral and
intellectual work through which he sought to reach his imagined community.
This
community, the Palestinian or the Arabic or the Oriental, had not been easy to
imagine, or having imagined it, easy to reach. Said was not really a refugee or
a displaced person. There was a certain choice in the first part of his career
which eased this very clever and erudite man into the appointed slot of
civilised, urbane, distinguished academic. His early work – Joseph Conrad
and the Fiction of Autobiography (1966) and Beginnings: Intention and
Method (1975) – did enough to launch him into the trajectory of success
which needs one or two damn good books. But the will to challenge the logic of
Arnoldian high culture is already there, the search for an alternative critical
position is immanent. This called for elective affinities. And Said chose to be
a Palestinian, an Arab, a third-world person. Later on, he would imagine himself
into a community of exiled, footloose, transnationally nationless people. This
gave a moral and visceral edge to his critique of the western canon, his radical
interrogation of the prescribed ramble among the masterpieces. The firm anchor
in a secular, rational, critical view of the world, memorably put on view in The
World, the Text and the Critic (1984), demands a kind of partisanship which
stand up to the quasi-theological orthodoxies of the west.
Locations
are very important in Said’s work. He makes it very clear in the beginning of
his major work Orientalism (1978) that he was writing from a definite
position, a position which has moral, intellectual, historical and geographical
specificities, and without which much of the import of what he wants to say will
be lost. The breathtaking novelty of Orientalism shook up the
intellectual establishment in the Anglophone world; it came at the right time.
Foucault’s brand of historical Post-structuralism was just beginning to form
something like a fashionable orthodoxy; the flush from the hard-headed
theoretical anti-humanism of seventies Marxism was fading; right wing reaction
was taking over the control of political and economic centres of power
knowledge. The cultural turn was already in place. Said’s book goes into the
intellectual and cultural construction of the western view of the east — the
vanquisher putting the vanquished in place.
As Said himself acknowledges, his work follows that of a great many
others — both eastern and western, but his harnessing of the Foucauldian
paradigm of power generating discourse and discourse determining praxis gave a
particular slant to his argument and a certain power to his rhetoric. The world
of the silenced, the repressed, the disempowered is set in stark contrast to the
coercive reconstruction of the orient in hegemonic western discourse. The
breadth and depth of the scholarship, the elegance of the argument, the cutting
edge of ethical liberalism which underlies his sympathy for the underdog — all
this combined to make the academic world sit up and take notice. Orientalism was
the shaping influence on a great deal of other work. It was the pioneering text
in what came to be known as Postcolonial Studies. Said’s particular inflection
of Post-structuralism extended the horizon of the humanities and social sciences
in many third world countries. Despite its limitations, Orientalism
continues to be a seminal text in understanding the discursive formation known
as the west.
Said
himself saw some of these limitations in later work. But the theoretical thrust
of Orientalism is a little lost in collections such as Imperialism and
Culture (1993). His strength of scholarship and of textual analysis
continued. In fact, Said belonged to the breed of polymaths who had made western
literature their happy hunting ground. His taste in western classical music,
about which he wrote with enormous elan, his grasp of theory, his knowledge of
languages, his meticulous scholarship and very shrewd judgements — all this
would have ensured for him a respectable position in academic circles. That he
was great deal more than an esteemed scholar and critic is due to the choice he
had made in mid-career, a choice of location, a moral position which generated a
certain kind of politics.
Said
was no Marxist, let alone communist. Marxism in Orientalism is consigned
to the catch-all container of Eurocentric discourse. In fact, his understanding
of the economic base of modern-day imperialism was not very profound, and one is
never sure whether he had ever thought out the theoretical implications of
people’s freedom or people’s democracy. He was passionate about freedom from
dominance and he wanted freedom for all. But just what would bring this freedom
remains a little hazy. And yet, the untheorized or inadequately theorized
evasion of Marxism notwithstanding, Said’s work will remain a testimony to the
strength of conscientious-objectionism in the interstices of western thought. If
we feel solidarity with the millions who thronged the streets of western cities
to express anger and anguish over the plight of the Iraqi people or to condemn
the global ambitions of imperialist capital working through the WTO, we realise
that the world needs more people like Edward Said. He will be missed.