Filters
-
Thema
-
Productvorm
-
Taal
-
Prijs
Resultaten voor 'hamid dabashi'
-
Mundus Imaginalis
€ 116,50 -
Persian Parables
Form as PhilosophyHamid Dabashi is the Hagop Kevorkian Professor of Iranian Studies and Comparative Literature at Columbia University. He is the author of The World of Persian Literary Humanism, Persophilia: Persian Culture on the Global Scene, Iran without Borders: Towards a Critique of the Postcolonial Nation, and other books.
€ 116,50 -
Imagine a Nation
Six Persian Poets in Search of a HomelandA critical and theoretical interpretation of six major modern Persian poets and the idea of a homeland, by Hamid Dabashi
€ 89,95 -
The Subversive Seventies in Tehran
Romancing RevolutionsProvides a first-hand account of the revolutionary politics and culture of 1970s Tehran.
€ 131,95 -
After Savagery
Gaza, Genocide, and the Illusion of Western Civilization"[A] searing condemnation of the status quo and a poignant intellectual reckoning with an unfolding tragedy." —Publisher's Weekly "Dabashi has shown that “Western civilization” has never been a self-contained European or white possession. It is the result of continuous, circular exchange with the East and the Global South.....Dabashi calls this a permanent loop: ideas move East to West and back again, refined by countless non-European hands. There is no pure, racially fenced origin story. To insist otherwise is not history; it is a myth designed to justify power." —The Press "Dabashi’s profound reflections are intertwined with updates from Israel’s genocide in Gaza, spelling both urgency in ending the obliteration of Palestinians, and the necessity of understanding what Israel and Zionism mean, what they reflect and embody, which is the entire Western spectrum of colonial brutality." —Middle East Monitor "This is a book of witness and a book of strategy disguised as philosophy. It will be shelved under Middle East Studies; it belongs on your desk, annotated, next to your news feed. Dabashi does not ask you to admire his argument. He asks you to risk something for it." —Middle East Eye "No book written in the middle of a catastrophe can close the case. After Savagery does something else. It recovers the conditions under which moral speech remains possible. It asks the reader to face a simple verdict. If a system calls itself civilisation while treating a people as disposable, then the name has rotted from within. A new moral grammar must be composed, patiently and truthfully, among those who have refused to disappear. Dabashi does not claim to possess that grammar. He sits with its first terms. He attends to the witnesses. He records the names. He keeps the fire." —The New Arab "At the heart of After Savagery is Dabashi’s insistence that the West’s “civilizing mission” must be understood as more than a colonial project; it is a moral and philosophical blueprint, one carefully constructed to present itself as universal, rational and ethical. Dabashi dissects the metaphysical and moral foundations upon which this blueprint rests, exposing how Western philosophy’s claims to universality have long been accepted at face value, even by those they were never designed to include. The Global South, he argues, has spent too long presuming that when Western thinkers spoke of humanity, they were speaking of the Global South too. They were not. In response, Dabashi issues a challenge: to turn away from these inherited signposts and follow wisdom produced by the Global South instead. " —Washington Report on Middle East Affairs l"After Savagery is a fountain of arguments and evidence that goes beyond and gives full meaning to the critiques of ‘the West and the rest’, and of supporters of Israel’s settler colonial erasure against the Palestinian people. Palestine is a revealer—Dabashi exposes the irredeemable racism behind the posture of universalism adopted by the Global Minority (the so-called ‘West’), but he also shows the path toward collective liberation from apartheid and its genocidal consequences. The genocide in Palestine has pushed us toward a critical juncture. Suspended between abyss and hope, we have the choice to preserve what remains of humanity and rebuild Gaza and the rest of Palestine from the ashes of this monstrosity." —Francesca Albanese, United Nations Special Rapporteur on the Occupied Palestinian Territories "I strongly recommend this book to readers who want to understand why so many people and governments around the world vehemently and incessantly criticize Israel and the United States as the main Gaza genocide perpetrators. Israel’s crimes in Palestine and its longstanding links with Western colonial practices fundamentally explain the gruesome and ongoing attempt to annihilate the indigenous Arabs of Palestine." —Rami Gl. Khouri for the Arab Center Washington DC "In his After Savagery: Gaza, Genocide, and the Illusion of Western Civilization, the renowned Iranian scholar and a lifelong supporter of Palestinian liberation struggle, Columbia University Professor Hamid Dabash demolished rather brilliantly “the West”, from its very ideological foundations rooted in the European Enlightenment philosophy, but built on the millions of corpses, and the countless enslaved labourers and stolen or “colonized” continents and sub-continents. Dabashi urges those who identify with categorically anti-colonialist thought to read Western philosophy – and anything that bears the label “Western” – anthropologically, rather than the universally valid truth claims." —FORSEA "To read After Savagery is to lose the luxury of innocence. It is also, in a strange way, to recover a kind of hope—not the hope that “the West” will redeem itself, but the hope that another moral imagination is already being born in the places it has tried hardest to erase. Gaza, in this book, is not only the world’s wound; it is also its compass." —The Left Berlin "Hamid Dabashi is one of the most brilliant and courageous truth-tellers in our grim and dim times. His powerful analysis and poignant words should inspire all who see the flagrant hypocrisy of the West and seek justice for the wretched of the earth." ―Dr. Cornel West "After Savagery illuminates why the Gaza genocide exposes the definitional barbarity of the project of European modernity, of which Zionism is an integral part. The engine of Dabashi’s book is the question of what we owe Palestinians beyond their metaphorical meanings for an anticolonial struggle. Rather than solipsistically instrumentalizing Palestinian suffering for rehabilitating the modern West’s presumed moral authority or Jewish innocence as "exilic" as so many other authors in the post-Holocaust and post-Gaza genre book business do, After Savagery enacts a stunning decolonial move through a poetic meditation on an intersectional imagination that destabilizes modernity’s genocidal logic." ―Atalia Omer, author of Days of Awe: Reimagining Jewishness in Solidarity with Palestinians "Based on a rich survey of poems, literature and philosophical tracts, Hamid Dabashi exposes how the genocide in Gaza epitomizes a longer history of racism, Islamophobia and orientalism that produced the colonial and post-colonial global order, and informed Europe’s most known thinkers who ironically perceived themselves as beacons of humanity. An incisive, disturbing yet thoroughly convincing essay." —Ilan Pappé "[After Savagery] covers a lot of ground. It delves deeply into ontology, epistemology, semantics, literature, art, filmmaking, poetry, politics, religion, exilism, and — especially — philosophy. After Savagery is not focused solely on the here and now of what is transpiring in historical Palestine. The book goes into the history, background, and philosophy that enables genocide. The book is scholarly and is well footnoted. If that is what the reader is looking for, then Hamid Dabashi’s After Savagery is well worth the read." —Dissident Voice "Arguing that settler colonial genocide in Gaza is historically an extension of the Holocaust, which itself was preceded by racial genocidal practices in the colonies, Hamid Dabashi considers solidarity with Palestine as a truly universal liberation that exposes the provinciality of Western philosophy. If readers evade facing Dabashi’s compelling arguments, they can’t but enjoy his erudition, his almost poetic literary style, and admire his resolute moral commitment." ―Azmi Bishara, author of Palestine: Matters of Truth and Justice "With formidable rigour, sophistication, and tenacity, Hamid Dabashi situates Palestine at the heart of a global struggle for liberation from the age of European colonialism. After Savagery places the reader on a daring path to build a new world that is fit for the "total human beings" that we are and aspire to be. Dabashi resolutely and defiantly insists that after savagery must come a committed intellectual and political project of resuscitating our collective humanity." ―Muhannad Ayyash author of Lordship and Liberation in Palestine-Israel "Hamid Dabashi has written a distinguished philosophical reflection on civilization and its opposite, on violence in thought and action, on the role of the imagination in human life, and on the enduring consequences of colonialism. In his work, Gaza becomes a paradigmatic example of the conceptual denigration and attempted eradication of all those whom Western governments and thinkers define as irremediably ‘other’. Dabashi’s analysis is truly impressive in its erudition, sympathetic breadth of vision, and passionate engagement." ―Raymond Geuss, professor emeritus of philosophy at the University of Cambridge “Reading Dabashi is like going for an extended coffee with a very smart friend.” ―Vijay Prashad, author of The Poorer Nations “The grand clash of civilizations and ideologies will increasingly take place in the West, with such writers and intellectuals as Dabashi.” ―The Guardian “A leading light in Iranian studies.” ―The Chronicle of Higher Education
€ 69,50 -
Iran in Revolt
Revolutionary Aspirations in a Post-Democratic World"Dabashi expertly combines philosophical rumination with sharp political analysis to ask probing questions about the state of our world in this learned study of Iran’s recent uprising." —Bill Fletcher, Jr., trade unionist, international solidarity activist and writer "In this historical era of plutocratic global autocracy and livestreamed genocidal violence, Hamid Dabashi provides a forceful diagnosis of the present moment: we are living through a time in which there is no model of a truly democratic state anywhere in the world, even as ordinary people everywhere fight for a better tomorrow against the odds. Where does this leave would-be revolutionary social movements like the Zhina uprising in Iran? Dabashi argues compellingly that our best hopes everywhere is in small-d democracy that fights at local and grassroots levels against the illusory promises of the State. A provocative and penetrating analysis of our dire times." —Golnar Nikpour, author of The Incarcerated Modern: Prisons and Public Life in Iran “Reading Dabashi is like going for an extended coffee with a very smart friend.” ―Vijay Prashad, author of The Poorer Nations “The grand clash of civilizations and ideologies will increasingly take place in the West, with such writers and intellectuals as Dabashi.” ―The Guardian “A leading light in Iranian studies.” ―The Chronicle of Higher Education
€ 76,50 -
Where Is Abbas Kiarostami?
Toward a Postcolonial Film-PhilosophyHamid Dabashi is the Hagop Kevorkian Professor of Iranian Studies and Comparative Literature at Columbia University. He is the author of many books, among them Masters and Masterpieces of Iranian Cinema and The End of Two Illusions: Islam after the West.
€ 110,95 -
Mashya and Mashyana Unearthed
Myth, Metonymy and the Unknowing SubjectThis is the story of Mashya and Mashyana Unearthed, an exploration of when and where ancient myths become metonymic in varied forms of contemporary cultural and aesthetic representations.
€ 131,95 -
The Persian Prince
The Rise and Resurrection of an Imperial Archetype"Hamid Dabashi's book takes the reader on a journey across time and place. 'More a persona than a person,' the Persian Prince reunites in one archetype such different images as the rebellious poet, the just monarch, and the charismatic prophet. Both a historical investigation and a philosophical-political proposal, the book will reward readers with many unusual intellectual encounters."—Giovanni Giorgini, University of Bologna and Columbia University "Disarmingly accessible, laden with millennia of Persian cultural riches, The Persian Prince deftly and decisively shifts the axis of history and of the conception of subjectivity itself. Colonizers and ayatollahs are mere blips in the long temporality of the Persian Prince, a figure of transformation that ultimately resides in the collective heart of rebellion."—Laura U. Marks, Simon Fraser University, author of Enfoldment and Infinity "In this gorgeously written tour de force, Hamid Dabashi spins the contrapuntal narrative of an archaic Iranian archetype as it weaves its way through political-poetical history. Building on his impressive body of work, The Persian Prince is a unique and formidable text that encapsulates the brilliance, vivacity, and political ferocity of Dabashi's mind."—Jeanne Morefield, University of Oxford, author of Unsettling the World "Hamid Dabashi's illuminating study, while both provincializing and enriching the classic frameworks of Machiavelli and Gramsci, provides a provocative and compelling archetype for understanding political power and organization."—Michael Hardt, Duke University, author of The Subversive Seventies "Rejecting an ideologically and politically manufactured binary between 'Islam and the West' and arguing for an 'irretrievably pluralistic' view of cultures and history, Dabashi illuminates the model of the Persian Prince as the archetype of 'a human being best fitted to face and embrace the world.' He eschews an overemphasis on 'political ideals' over 'literary aspects' in defining the nature of sovereignty and relations between rulers and the ruled, and he advocates a rediscovery of democratic institutions in the Muslim and Persianate worlds, and far beyond. Recommended."—B. Tavakolian, CHOICE
€ 99,95 -
An Iranian Childhood
Rethinking History and Memory'In a prose both intimate and critical, Dabashi creates a language - dare I say the language - for Iranians to articulate their collective experiences. Yet in his indelible textual mosaic, organically interweaving Rumi with Ricoeur, Bollywood with Hollywood via a personal and intellectual history, he communes with all his readers, no matter their origins' Atefeh Akbari, Barnard College
€ 42,95 -
The End of Two Illusions
Islam after the West"Dabashi makes a compelling claim in the epistemic violence created by “The West and Islam” that fits suitably in the ongoing work of decolonial scholarship."
€ 34,50 -
On Edward Said
Remembrance of Things PastAn intimate intellectual, political and personal portrait of Edward Said, one of the 20th centuries leading public intellectuals
€ 66,50