Robert Irwin (writer)

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Robert Graham Irwin (23 August 1946 – 28 June 2024) was a British scholar and novelist. Notable among of his scholarly works is For Lust of Knowing: The Orientalists and Their Enemies, a critique of Edward Said's concept of "Orientalism".

Robert Irwin
Born
Robert Graham Irwin

(1946-08-23)23 August 1946
Guildford, England
Died28 June 2024(2024-06-28) (aged 77)
London, England
EducationUniversity of Oxford
Occupations
  • Scholar
  • novelist
Notable work

Biography

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Robert Graham Irwin was born in Guildford on 23 August 1946.[1] He attended Epsom College, read modern history at the University of Oxford, and did graduate research at the School of Oriental and African Studies (SOAS) under the supervision of Bernard Lewis. His thesis was on the Mamluk reconquest of the Crusader states, but he failed to complete it.[2] During his studies, he converted to Islam and spent some time in a dervish monastery in Algeria.[3][4] From 1972 he was a lecturer in medieval history at the University of St. Andrews.[2] He gave up academic life in 1977 in order to write fiction, while continuing to lecture part-time at Oxford, Cambridge and SOAS.[2] Irwin was a research associate at SOAS,[5] and the Middle East editor of The Times Literary Supplement. He has published a history of Orientalism and was an acknowledged expert on The Arabian Nights.[6]

Many of Irwin's novels focus on Arabic themes. This includes his first, the acclaimed dark fantasy novel The Arabian Nightmare, which was inspired by Jan Potocki's The Manuscript Found in Saragossa.[7][8] Later novels would focus on diverse subjects, such as British Surrealism (Exquisite Corpse) and Satanism in Swinging London (Satan Wants Me). A character from Satan Wants Me, the Satanist Charlie Felton, has a cameo in the 1969 episode of the League of Extraordinary Gentlemen comic.[9] Alan Moore, the comic's creator, has described Irwin as a "fantastic writer".[10]

Irwin died in London on 28 June 2024, at the age of 77.[11]

Orientalism

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In 2006, Irwin published For Lust of Knowing: The Orientalists and their Enemies, his critique of Edward Said's Orientalism (1978). Among various points, he maintains that Said focused his attention on the British and French in his critique of Orientalism, while it was German scholars who made the original contributions. He notes that Said linked the academic Orientalism in those countries with imperialist designs on the Middle East, yet, by the 19th and the early 20th centuries, it was more proper to regard Russia as an empire having imperialist designs on the Caucasus region and Central Asia. Irwin maintains that the issue of Russia's actual imperialist designs is avoided by Said.[12] Another of Irwin's key points is that oriental scholarship, or "Orientalism", "owes more to Muslim scholarship than most Muslims realise."[13]

Maya Jasanoff in the London Review of Books argued: "...Irwin's factual corrections, however salutary, do not so much knock down the theoretical claims of Orientalism as chip away at single bricks. They also do nothing to discount the fertility of Orientalism for other academics. The most thought-provoking works it has inspired have not blindly accepted Said's propositions, but have expanded and modified them."[14]

Published works

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Fiction

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  • The Arabian Nightmare (Dedalus 1983)
  • The Limits of Vision (Dedalus 1986)
  • The Mysteries of Algiers (Dedalus 1988)
  • Exquisite Corpse (Dedalus 1995)
  • Prayer-Cushions of the Flesh (Dedalus 1997)
  • Satan Wants Me (Dedalus 1999)
  • Wonders Will Never Cease (Dedalus 2016)
  • My Life is like a Fairy Tale (Dedalus 2019)
  • The Runes Have Been Cast (Dedalus 2021)
  • Tom's Version (Dedalus 2023)

Nonfiction

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  • The Middle East in the Middle Ages: the Early Mamluk Sultanate 1250–1382 (Croom Helm 1986)
  • The Arabian Nights: A Companion (Allen Lane 1994)
  • Islamic Art (Laurence King 1997)
  • Night and Horses and the Desert: the Penguin Anthology of Classical Arabic Literature (Allen Lane 1999)
  • The Alhambra (Harvard University Press, 2005).
  • For Lust of Knowing: the Orientalists and their Enemies (Allen Lane, 2006). (US edition: Dangerous Knowledge: Orientalism and Its Discontents (Overlook Press, 2006)
  • Camel (Reaktion Books 2010)
  • Mamluks and Crusaders (Ashgate Variorum 2010)
  • Visions of the Jinn; Illustrators of the Arabian Nights (The Arcadian Library 2010)
  • Memoirs of a Dervish: Sufis, Mystics and the Sixties (Profile Books, 2011)
  • Ibn Khaldun: An intellectual Biography. Princeton University Press. 2018. ISBN 9780691174662.

References

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  1. ^ Stableford, Brian (2009). Against the New Gods and Other Essays on Writers of Imaginative Fiction. Borgo Press. p. 138. ISBN 978-1-4344-5743-1.
  2. ^ a b c "Robert Irwin Interview". Resources for Studying the Crusades. Queen Mary, University of London.
  3. ^ Jelbert, Steve (17 April 2011). "Memoirs of a Dervish, By Robert Irwin". The Independent. Retrieved 6 July 2015.
  4. ^ Favorov, Pyotr (6 July 2015). ""Я плохой мусульманин": интервью автора "Арабского кошмара" Роберта Ирвина" (in Russian). Afisha. Retrieved 6 July 2015.
  5. ^ "Mr Robert Irwin". Department of History: Departmental Staff. SOAS, University of London.
  6. ^ Jakeman, Jane (10 April 1999). "The Books Interview: Robert Irwin - No sympathy for the devil". The Independent.
  7. ^ The 2002 reprint of The Arabian Nightmare carries praise from the Washington Post, the Sunday Times and The Guardian.
  8. ^ Stableford, Brian, "Irwin, Robert (Graham)" in St. James Guide To Fantasy Writers, edited by David Pringle. St. James Press, 1996, p. 301–3.
  9. ^ Nevins, Jess. "Annotations to "League of Extraordinary Gentlemen" Volume III Chapter Two, a.k.a. Century: 1969".
  10. ^ Moore, Alan (14 July 2011). "A couple of extraordinary gentlemen chat: Padraig talks to Alan Moore about the new LOEG Century". Forbidden Planet International.
  11. ^ "Robert Irwin (1946–2024)". Locus. 1 July 2024. Archived from the original on 3 July 2024.
  12. ^ Grimes, William (1 November 2006). "The West Studies the East, and Trouble Follows". The New York Times.
  13. ^ Irwin, Robert (23 January 2008). "Islamic science and the long siesta: Did scientific progress in the Islamic world really grind to a halt after the twelfth century? (A review of Muzaffar Iqbal's SCIENCE AND ISLAM)". The Times. Archived from the original on 17 May 2011.
  14. ^ Jasanoff, Maya (8 June 2006). "Before and After Said". London Review of Books. 28 (11).