Mes 1244 201820 PDF
Mes 1244 201820 PDF
Mes 1244 201820 PDF
Spring 2019
Edward Said’s ground breaking work, Orientalism, was published in 1978 and soon became a
founding moment for the field of postcolonial theory and a pivotal point of return within it. A
year later, Said published The Question of Palestine, whose explicit task was to present the
Palestinian story and cause to an American and European audience. Said made there a special
effort to reach out to Jewish intellectuals. The book made little impression on the audience to
which it was intended. The explicit and more tacit relations between the two books and the
striking contrast between their receptions will guide in the first part of the seminar (weeks 2-6)
into Said’s work, reconstructing his position as a public intellectual and a Palestinian cultural
hero, and understanding the limits of his critical interventions.
The seminar’s first part will enable us to pose – with Said and beyond him – a series of
questions about “the Question of Palestine” (week 7). We will get acquainted with some
moments from the history of “the question of” as a form intellectual intervention and a politics
of discourse that both expresses and takes part in polarized relations of power. We will ask who
is authorized to be an author of such a question and who is placed in the position of its
problematized object. And we will relate all these questions to the politics of knowledge
explored in Orientalism. Of central concern in this context will be the relation between “the
Question of Palestine” and “the Jewish Question.”
On this basis, the seminar third part (weeks 8-12) will explore three related paths. We will look
for “the question of Palestine” in the work of three contemporary French thinkers, the
philosophers Deleuze and Foucault, and the author Jean Genet (weeks 8-9). We will use “the
question” as an analytic tool in a critical reading of early Zionist discourse of the least
nationalist kind (weeks 10-11), and of some Palestinian thinkers committed to the Palestinian
cause (week 12). We will conclude this investigation and celebrate the end of the semester with
some works of art and scholarship that seek to imagine Palestine without and beyond “the
question.”
Pedagogic Framework and Goal
The Seminar is designed for advanced undergraduate students, but there are no pre-requisites
and all are welcome. The course invites students to an intellectual journey along three different
paths that cross each other in multiple points: the work of Edward Said, its theoretical and
political context; the rhetoric of “the question” as an analytic tool for studying modes of
othering, where a discourse constitutes an inferior Other though its “Orientalization,”
racialization” (or any other form of binary, hierarchal relations); convergences and divergences
between Zionist and Palestinian nationalist discourse. Each of these path be explored for its
own sake; by interlacing them the seminar seeks to reflect upon – but also demonstrate – the
work of critical theory, the way it is – or should or might be – localized or displaced, and what
its limits are as a form of engaged knowledge.
Course Requirements
Over 14 weeks, students will spend 2.5 hours per week in class (35 hours total). Required
reading for the course meetings is expected to take up approximately 7.5 hours per week (95
hours in 13 weeks). In addition, researching for and writing 7 short response papers and one
final paper is estimated at total of approximately 55 hours over the course of the term.
Students’ Obligations, Assignments, and Evaluation: 1) class attendance and participation
(20% of final grade); 7 short (1-2 double spaced) response papers (30% of final grade); final 10-
15 page paper (50% of final grade).
Response papers should be submitted on the night before the seminar and present an idea, an
insight, an argument or a question related to on one of the texts from the reading list of that
week. Students should be ready to discuss their response in class.
The Final Paper is an essay (about 15-20 double spaced pages) focusing on a well framed
question, whether historical, hermeneutical, or theoretical. Outlines for final papers are due on
March 15th. Outlines will be discussed in private meeting with me. Outlines are not graded.
When writing the final paper, however, comments on the outline, as well as on the response
papers should be taken into consideration.
In Class Presentation – In preparation for the final paper, students may present a work in
progress in class, in the form of 20-30 minutes presentation. These presentations are optional
and are not graded.
Students’ Reading Suggestions – Suggestions for additional or alternative texts that fall within
the general framework of the seminar are most welcome.
Group Work – At several points along the course of the semester students will be asked to
collaborate in small groups and present one of the texts for discussion. These presentation are
evaluated as part of class participation.
Reading Materials: Detailed bibliography is assigned for each meeting. Readings include mostly
required and some recommended texts. Instructions for reading will be given weekly and may
reflect students’ interests and questions that come up in class. Most of the readings will be
available online, either through the folders uploaded to the course’s website on Canvas, or
through links that will be provided before the beginning of the semester.
Class Schedule
1 Introduction
2. Beginnings
Edward Said, Beginning: Intention and Method, chaps 2, 4.
----------------, “The Claims of Individuality” and “The Palestinian Experience,” in Bayoumi and
Rubin (eds.), The Edward Said Reader (Vintage Books 2000).
Robert J. C. Young, “We Belong to Palestine Still: Edward Said and the Challenge of
Representation,” in R. Braidotti and P. Gilroy, Conflicting Humanities (Bloomsbury Publishing
Plc 2016), 129-142.
Recommended: Conor McCarthy, The Cambridge introduction to Edward Said (Cambridge UP
2010), pp. 13-94.
Beshara Doumani, Beshara Doumani, B. (2007). “Palestine versus the Palestinians? The iron
laws and ironies of a people denied.” Journal of Palestine studies, 36(4), 49-64.
14 Students’ Presentations