Edward Said’s Humanism and Democratic Criticism: Bridging the Gap Between the Humanities and the Public Sphere in the Post-9/11 World
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Price |
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| Article: Print
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$US10.00 |
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| Article: Electronic
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$US5.00 |
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A study of Edward Said's vision for Humanism and the role of the university in the post-9/11 world.
| Keywords: |
Humanism, Historicism, Multiculturalism, Philology, Academic Freedom, Public Sphere, Democratic Criticism, Habermas, Communicative Action |
The International Journal of the Humanities, Volume 4, Issue 7, pp.69-76.
Article: Print (Spiral Bound).
Article: Electronic (PDF File; 1.817MB).
My research has focused on early eighteenth-century French fiction and journalism: Abbé Prévost,
Montesquieu, Graffigny, Denon as well as Proust. Of particular interest to me are questions of interpretation and reception of early French fiction, and the role of international newsletters in the creation of the Republic of Letters and representations of national character. I teach courses on the Enlightenment, Francophone authors, and French cinema.
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