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Edward Said

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  • Conductor Daniel Barenboim during a rehearsal
    Dialogue in the shadow of war

    Music unites Israelis and Palestinians in Berlin

    At the Barenboim-Said Academy in the German capital, young Israeli and Arab musicians study together. The Hamas attacks on Israel happened just before the start of a new semester. What has been their reaction?

  • The orchestra's repertoire includes symphonic works, operas and chamber music. Concert highlights have included performances at the Berlin Philharmonie or Milan's Teatro alla Scala. The orchestra is a regular guest at the BBC Proms and the festivals in Salzburg and Lucerne
    Edward W. Said Days in Berlin

    Music – facilitator of intercultural dialogue

    How can Edward Said's ideas help people better understand Yoko Ono's performance art, pre-colonial rhythms from Africa or the music of Christian missionaries in Japan? The Edward W. Said Days in Berlin marking 20 years since the literary scholar's death explored a whole range of questions. Ceyda Nurtsch reports

  • "If we want a shared future worth living in, I can think of no better preparation than reading Annemarie Schimmel," writes Stefan Weidner.
    Women and Islamic studies

    Annemarie Schimmel’s pioneering take on Islam

    This year Annemarie Schimmel, the great German scholar of Islamic studies, would have turned 100. Unique within the German and international academic community of her time, Schimmel’s pioneering work was characterised by a love of Islam. A tribute by Stefan Weidner

  • The Holocaust, colonialism and mutual understanding

    Time for a refresher in humanity

    It is possible to write about the Holocaust and the crimes of colonial powers without downplaying anything. In her latest book, Charlotte Wiedemann focuses on the numerous blind spots in our culture of commemoration. By Rene Wildangel

  • Richard W. Bulliet's "Methodists and Muslims: My life as an Orientalist"

    The agency of historians. Or what Edward Said missed out on

    Is it legitimate for a historian to compare 11th century Nishapur with 20th century Rockford, Illinois? What possible motive can there be for studying Middle Eastern societies if you have no biographical ties with the region? Eminent Middle East historian Richard Bulliet answers these and other questions in his witty memoir "Methodists and Muslims: My life as an Orientalist". Sonja Hegasy read the book

  • BBC Radio 4

    Covering Edward Said – 40 years of Islam, media and the West

    Author and columnist Nesrine Malik explores the legacy of Edward Said's "Covering Islam", published forty years ago – and his views on the relationship between Islam and the media.

  • Interview with Prof Timothy Brennan

    Why Edward Said still matters

    Professor Timothy Brennan's "Places of Mind: A Life of Edward Said" is a detailed biography of one of the most important intellectuals of the twentieth century, taking us on a journey from Edward Said's childhood in the Middle East to his public and academic life in the United States. In this interview with Tugrul von Mende, Brennan describes the challenges of writing about the many different aspects of Edward Said's life

  • Berlin's "A New Divan"

    Goethe's enduring vision of cultural dialogue

    In his "West-Eastern Divan" published 200 years ago, Goethe promoted the idea of cultural proximity between Orient and Occident. The festival "A New Divan" in Berlin aimed at revisiting his idea. By Grzegorz Szymanowski

  • Interview with Hamid Dabashi

    Europe’s coloniality persists after the fall of empire

    An interview with the Iranian-American historian and cultural philosopher Hamid Dabashi about writing, Europe's past and present, right-wing populism and the Arab uprisings. By Tugrul Mende

  • Book review: Stefan Weidner's ʺ1001 Books. The Literatures of the Orientʺ

    The Middle East – a rich vein of world literature

    Recently published in German, Stefan Weidner's new book issues an invitation to all those who would like to be better acquainted with the literature of the Middle East – a profoundly fascinating journey through the works of Arab, Persian and Turkish authors. By Gerrit Wustmann

  • Father of post-colonial studies

    Edward Said – exiled between cultures

    When people think of Edward Said, the first thing that generally comes to mind is his criticism of Orientalism. As a result, the theme of exile – which played no less significant a role in Said's writing and life – is often overlooked. By Tarek Azizeh

  • Book review: Susannah Heschel on "Jewish Islam"

    Jewish Orientalism?

    In her book Susannah Heschel investigates the role of Islam in the emergence of a Jewish identity and seeks to pay tribute to the academic legacy of Jewish-German scholars of Islam of the 19th and 20th centuries. But the romantic narrative of a somewhat different kind of Orientalism has its pitfalls. By Ozan Keskinkilic

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