Robert Graham Irwin
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Robert Graham Irwin (born 1946) is a British historian, novelist, and writer on Arabic literature.
He read modern history at the University of Oxford, and did graduate research at SOAS. From 1972 he was a lecturer in Medieval History at the University of St. Andrews. He gave up the academic life in 1977, to write.
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[edit] Dangerous Knowledge
In 2006 his critique of Edward Said's Orientalism, "Dangerous Knowledge: Orientalism and its Discontents," was published.
Among his various critiques, he points to how Said focused his attention on the British and the French in his critique of Orientalism. He also addressed how Said linked the academic Orientalism in those countries with imperialist designs on the Middle East. Yet, by the 19th and the early 20th centuries it was more proper to assign Russia as an empire having imperialist designs on the Caucasus region and Central Asia. Irwin pointed to how Russia evaded Said's attention. [1]
[edit] Works
- The Arabian Nightmare (1983) novel
- The Middle East in the Middle Ages:The Early Mamluk Sultanate 1250-1382 (1984)
- The Limits of Vision (1986)
- The Mysteries of Algiers (1988)
- The Arabian Nights: A Companion (1994)
- Exquisite Corpse (1995)
- Prayer-Cushions of the Flesh (1997)
- Islamic Art (1997)
- Satan Wants Me (1999)
- Night and Horses and the Desert: the Penguin Anthology of Classical Arabic Literature (1999)
- The Alhambra (2005) Publisher: Harvard University Press
- For Lust of Knowing: The Orientalists and their Enemies (2006)
- Dangerous Knowledge: Orientalism and Its Discontents, Overlook Press (2006)
[edit] External links
[edit] See also
[edit] References
- ^ http://www.nytimes.com/2006/11/01/books/01grim.html?ex=1163394000&en=b2e925d36504c43c&ei=5070 William Grimes, "The West Studies the East, and Trouble Follows", "New York Times" November 1, 2006