Re: Orientalism by Edward Said
Reply #1 - April 20, 2010, 10:25 AM
This could be a very long thread indeed.
It has been one of the most influential, perhaps the most influential book in academia and the humanities and literary criticism of the last 40 years. He basically contests that 'Orientalism', the academic study of the orient, was, not nessecarily through design or deliberately, complicit in the colonial project. This was clear in the art of Europe, the novels, poetry and so on too - a process of 'essentiallising' and 'stereotyping' 'the East'. He pays particular focus on the Arab and Islamic world and ties it into how they are perpetual victims of the 'gaze' of imperialists, and have been turned by orientalists and artists into 'the other'. Even though the word hadn't been invented when he wrote it, it also feeds into the thesis of 'Islamophobia' that is peddled alot these days.
Its not that some of what he says does not have some merit, its that he overplays his hand, and his followers have overplayed their hands too. Ibn Warraq writes a critique of it that is fairly engaging, but there are others out there from a less polemical position who have taken issue with him too.
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