Jeffrey Sacks is Associate Professor of Arabic and Comparative Literature at the University of California, Riverside. He is the author of Iterations of Loss: Mutilation and Aesthetic Form, al-Shidyaq to Darwish (Fordham, 2015), which won the Harry Levin Prize First Book Prize from the ACLA, and translator of Mahmoud Darwish's Why Did You leave the Horse Alone? (Archipelago, 2006).
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"It is not only that Sacks shows settler life to exceed the settler's life in the colony. It is not only that he tracks settler life's linguistic and philosophical practices, sustained by social and juridical forms, and pressed-out at the world in the manner of a counterinsurgent attack. By attuning the reader to an 'anontological form' emerging from Arab and Arabic ways of doing language, possessing neither property nor self, Sacks also gathers poetic withdrawals from settler life. The result is an opening--a struggle, a reanimated tradition--that refuses division and mastery."---Samera Esmeir, University of California, Berkeley "Jeffrey Sacks writes with such fluent intensity, with an erudition so broad and so focused, that he reveals a mode of reading that seizes the time and is unheld by it, that defends the land and is unbound to it, thereby discerning and advancing a specific poetics of Palestinian insurgency that is and bears a planetary gift that genocidal settlement can't steal--the great goodness of life. There is no right to refuse such beautiful and terrible refusal."---Fred Moten, New York University

