Tag: book review

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The Complexity of Exile: Searching for Edward Said

By Alessandro Columbu
Although first published in 1999, Edward W. Said’s Out of Place feels uncannily contemporary. Said’s prose retains a clarity and ethical attentiveness, a book whose voice continues to speak in an extraordinary eloquent tone, directly to the present. The book is at once a personal testimony and a reckoning with memory, language(s), family, and formation.

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Language, Lunacy, and the Literary Provocateur: Life Writing and Schizophrenia

By Claire Phillips

The night before picking up a copy of The Collected Schizophrenias: Essays, Esmé Weijun Wang’s essays on the subject of “the full psychotic spectrum” or what are called “the schizophrenias,” I anticipated its themes in a threatening dream related to my mother’s struggle with an illness that went undiagnosed for far too long.