Skip to content

Results:

1 - 10 of 22

Documents

1970

Edward Said, 'The Arab Portrayed'

It was following the Six-Day War of 1967 that Arab Americans began to seriously discuss, and be politically active in, questions regarding the Arab World and US government policy and US public mindsets towards it, as Salim Yacub’s Imperfect Strangers: Americans, Arabs, and U.S.-Middle East Relations in the 1970s (2016) has argued.

This is an essay written in 1967/68 by the literary scholar and then slowly emerging public intellectual Edward Said (1935-2003). It was originally published in a special issue of the US journal The Arab World, which was republished as an edited volume titled The Arab-Israeli Confrontation of 1967: An Arab Perspective. Beginning with an incident at Princeton University in summer 1967, Said analyzes US views of Arabs—situating them vis-à-vis European views somewhat differently than he later would in his 1978 classic Orientalism—and ends by invoking (Western) “imperialism” and “the Arab’s … right to reoccupy his place in history and in actuality,” a theme he would develop in his masterly Beginnings: Intention and Method (1975)

December 9, 1952

Telegram, Taipei Secretary General Wang to the Chinese Embassy in the US

Taipei Secretary General Wang reports on William Curtis Chase's plan.

November 18, 1952

Telegram, Chinese Embassy in Washington DC

Report on a speech of the Korean ambassador in the United States about using the Kuomintang's army.

November 19, 1952

Telegram, Chinese Embassy

Record of the fact that Nolan's speech about using the Kuomintang's army to the Korean War.

September 9, 1952

Telegram, Ambassador Wellington Koo to the Foreign Minister Yeh

Koo explains the reason why the US was disgusted with the news report from Taipei about dispatching troops to the Korean War.

December 17, 1952

Telegram, Taipei to Foreign Minister Yeh

Secretary General Wang analyzes the current political situation, American military aid for Taiwan, and reminds Yeh to respond to the United States about dispatching the Kuomintang's army to the Korean War carefully.

November 25, 1952

Telegram, George Yeh to the Taipei Minister and Dean

Foreign Minister Yeh states the American political situation and its influence on Asia and gives some advice for a response.

November 10, 1952

Telegram, George Yeh to the Taipei Dean Chen

Foreign Minister Yeh analyzes the possible influence of the development of the U.S. presidential election and its Far East foreign policy on the Korean War.

July 10, 1952

Telegram, Ambassador Wellington Koo to the Taipei Presidential Palace

Koo reports on his observation of the President Harry S. Truman's attitude toward dispatching the Kuomintang's army to the Korean War.

May 10, 1952

Telegram, Ambassador Wellington Koo to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs

Koo reports on the opinion of Robert A. Taft's presidential election campaign members on dispatching the Kuomindang's army to the Korean War.

Pagination