Professional Documents
Culture Documents
Said was a privileged child and had little interest in the conflict between
Israel and Palestine. His educational life was one of private school wealth,
but perhaps most importantly, it was in a multi-ethnic, multi-religious
community.
In 1951, Said was expelled from Victoria College in Cairo for poor
behavior. Since his father had acquired American citizenship some years
earlier, Edward was also an American citizen. He was sent to the United
States and he finished high school at a private boarding school in New
England. Upon graduation he went to Princeton University and studied
English literature and history. He pursued his graduate studies at
Harvard. His Ph.D. dissertation was on Joseph Conrad.
In 1970 Said went to visit his family in Beirut, and while there got caught
up in the struggle for the liberation of Palestine. He became part of a
community of academics and writers who were involved in various
colonial and postcolonial struggles. During this time Said translated the
speeches of Yassir Arafat into English for the Western press. He became
an articulate voice for the liberation of Palestine in Europe and the U.S.
He remained independent and never affiliated with a political party.
However in 1977, Said was elected to the Palestinian National Congress in
exile.
In the 1980's and 1990's Said effectively used his fame to further the
cause of Palestine and to advocate for human rights. In the 1980's Said
actively lobbied the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO) to re-think the
strategy of armed struggle toward liberation and urged Palestinians and
all Arabs to understand the importance of mutual respect and co-
existence with Israelis. He advocated a two-state solution. As a temperate
voice, he made many friends within Israel.
The 1990's was a politically and personally difficult period for Said. In
1991 he was diagnosed with leukemia. The pain, suffering, and lengthy
hospitalization prompted him to write a memoir. Out of Place relates the
experiences of his youth and his feelings of exile. Said's illness went into
remission, but it still took a toll on his health and lifestyle. It was during
this period that he returned to Palestine for the first time since his
childhood.
Orientalism is:
“the study of Near and Far Eastern societies and cultures, languages, and peoples by
Western scholars.”
“the imitation or depiction of aspects of Eastern cultures in the West by writers,
designers and artists”
The former meaning has negative connotations because it refers to the study of the East by
Westerners shaped by the attitudes of the era of European imperialism in the 18th and 19th
centuries. It implies old-fashioned and prejudiced outsider interpretations of Eastern cultures
and peoples. This viewpoint was most famously articulated and propagated by Edward Said
in his controversial 1978 book Orientalism, which was critical of this scholarly tradition and
of a few modern scholars, including Princeton University professor Bernard Lewis.
Orientalism and Orient, derive from the Latin word oriens ("east", "rising [sun]"),
and, equally likely, from the Greek word ('h'oros', the direction of the rising sun).
"Orient" is the opposite of Occident. (Despite "Occident" being uncommon English
usage, both the "Orient" and "Occident" usages are current in French and Spanish.
Similar words are the French-derived Levant and Anatolia, deriving from the Greek
anatole, two further locutions denoting the direction from which the sun rises.)
The Terms
The Orient signifies a system of representations framed by political forces that brought the
Orient into Western learning, Western consciousness, and Western empire. The Orient exists
for the West, and is constructed by and in relation to the West. It is a mirror image of what is
inferior and alien ("Other") to the West.
Orientalism is "a manner of regularized (or Orientalized) writing, vision, and study,
dominated by imperatives, perspectives, and ideological biases ostensibly suited to the
Orient." It is the image of the 'Orient' expressed as an entire system of thought and
scholarship.
The Oriental is the person represented by such thinking. The man is depicted as feminine,
weak, yet strangely dangerous because he poses a threat to white, Western women. The
woman is both eager to be dominated and strikingly exotic. The Oriental is a single image, a
sweeping generalization, a stereotype that crosses countless cultural and national boundaries.
Latent Orientalism is the unconscious, untouchable certainty about what the Orient is. Its
basic content is static and unanimous. The Orient is seen as separate, eccentric, backward,
silently different, sensual, and passive. It has a tendency towards despotism and away from
progress. It displays feminine penetrability and supine malleability. Its progress and value are
judged in terms of, and in comparison to, the West, so it is always the Other, the conquerable,
and the inferior.
Manifest Orientalism is what is spoken and acted upon. It includes information and changes
in knowledge about the Orient as well as policy decisions founded in Orientalist thinking. It
is the expression in words and actions of Latent Orientalism.
In time, the common understanding of 'the Orient' has continually shifted East, as
Western explorers traveled farther in to Asia.
In terms of The Old World, Europe was considered The Occident (The West), and its
farthest-known extreme The Orient (The East).
In Biblical times, the Three Wise Men 'from the Orient' were actually Magi from "The
East", (relative to Judea), probably meaning the Persian Empire or Arabia. After a
period, as Europe learned of countries farther East, the defined limit of 'the Orient'
shifted eastwards, until reaching the Pacific Ocean, to what Occidentals (westerners)
knew as 'the Far East'.
Dating from the Roman Empire until the Middle Ages, what is now, in the West,
considered 'the Middle East' was then considered 'the Orient'. In that time, the
flourishing cultures of the Far East were unknown; likewise Europe was unknown in
and to the Far East.
In contemporary English, Oriental is usually synonymous for the peoples, cultures,
and goods from the parts of East Asia traditionally occupied by East Asians and
Southeast Asians racially categorised "Mongoloid". This excludes Indians, Arabs, and
the other West Asian peoples. In some parts of the United States, the term is
considered derogatory; for example, Washington state prohibits use of the word
"Oriental" in legislation and government documentation, preferring the word "Asian"
instead.
Earlier Orientalism
The first 'Orientalists' were 19th century scholars who translated the writings of 'the Orient'
into English, based on the assumption that a truly effective colonial conquest required
knowledge of the conquered peoples. This idea of knowledge as power is present throughout
Said's critique. By knowing the Orient, the West came to own it. The Orient became the
studied, the seen, the observed, the object; Orientalist scholars were the students, the seers,
the observers, the subject. The Orient was passive; the West was active.
One of the most significant constructions of Orientalist scholars is that of the Orient itself.
What is considered the Orient is a vast region, one that spreads across a myriad of cultures
and countries. It includes most of Asia as well as the Middle East. The depiction of this single
'Orient' which can be studied as a cohesive whole is one of the most powerful
accomplishments of Orientalist scholars. It essentializes an image of a prototypical Oriental--
a biological inferior that is culturally backward, peculiar, and unchanging--to be depicted in
dominating and sexual terms. The discourse and visual imagery of Orientalism is laced with
notions of power and superiority, formulated initially to facilitate a colonizing mission on the
part of the West and perpetuated through a wide variety of discourses and policies. The
language is critical to the construction. The feminine and weak Orient awaits the dominance
of the West; it is a defenseless and unintelligent whole that exists for, and in terms of, its
Western counterpart. The importance of such a construction is that it creates a single subject
matter where none existed, a compilation of previously unspoken notions of the Other. Since
the notion of the Orient is created by the Orientalist, it exists solely for him or her. Its identity
is defined by the scholar who gives it life.
Contemporary Orientalism
Said argues that Orientalism can be found in current Western depictions of "Arab" cultures.
The depictions of "the Arab" as irrational, menacing, untrustworthy, anti-Western, dishonest,
and--perhaps most importantly--prototypical, are ideas into which Orientalist scholarship has
evolved. These notions are trusted as foundations for both ideologies and policies developed
by the Occident. Said writes: "The hold these instruments have on the mind is increased by
the institutions built around them. For every Orientalist, quite literally, there is a support
system of staggering power, considering the ephemerality of the myths that Orientalism
propagates. The system now culminates into the very institutions of the state. To write about
the Arab Oriental world, therefore, is to write with the authority of a nation, and not with the
affirmation of a strident ideology but with the unquestioning certainty of absolute truth
backed by absolute force." He continues, "One would find this kind of procedure less
objectionable as political propaganda--which is what it is, of course--were it not accompanied
by sermons on the objectivity, the fairness, the impartiality of a real historian, the implication
always being that Muslims and Arabs cannot be objective but that Orientalists. . .writing
about Muslims are, by definition, by training, by the mere fact of their Westernness. This is
the culmination of Orientalism as a dogma that not only degrades its subject matter but also
blinds its practitioners."
Said puts forward several definitions of 'Orientalism' in the introduction to Orientalism. Some
of these have been more widely quoted and influential than others:
"A way of coming to terms with the Orient that is based on the Orient's special place
in European Western experience." (p. 1)
"a style of thought based upon an ontological and epistemological distinction made
between 'the Orient' and (most of the time) 'the Occident'." (p. 2)
"A Western style for dominating, restructuring, and having authority over the Orient."
(p. 3)
"...particularly valuable as a sign of European-Atlantic power over the Orient than it is
as a veridic discourse about the Orient." (p. 6)
"A distribution of geopolitical awareness into aesthetic, scholarly, economic,
sociological, historical, and philological texts." (p. 12)
In his Preface to the 2003 edition of Orientalism, Said also warned against the "falsely
unifying rubrics that invent collective identities," citing such terms as "America," "The
West," and "Islam," which were leading to what he felt was a manufactured "clash of
civilisations."
Criticisms of Said
Historian Bernard Lewis:
Said's account contains many factual, methodological and conceptual errors.
Said ignores many genuine contributions to the study of Eastern cultures made by
Westerners during the Enlightenment and Victorian eras.
Said's theory does not explain why the French and English pursued the study of Islam
in the 16th and 17th centuries, long before they had any control or hope of control in
the Middle East.
Said has ignored the contributions of Italian, Dutch, and particularly the massive
contribution of German scholars.
Lewis argued that Orientalism arose from humanism, which was distinct from
Imperialist ideology, and sometimes in opposition to it. Orientalist study of Islam
arose from the rejection of religious dogma, and was an important spur to discovery
of alternative cultures.
Lewis criticised as "intellectual protectionism" the argument that only those within a
culture could usefully discuss it.
Said’s rebuttal:
must be placed into its proper context.
Lewis' critique of his thesis could hardly be judged in the disinterested, scholarly light
that Lewis would like to present himself, but must be understood in the proper
knowledge of (what Said claimed) was Lewis' own (often masked) neo-imperialist
proclivities, as displayed by the latter's political or quasi-political appointments and
pronouncements. Specifically, Lewis is aligned with prominent "think tanks" that
promote "neoconservative" views on U.S. Middle East Policy
Orientalism: Summary
"My whole point about this system is not that it is a misrepresentation of some
Oriental essence — in which I do not for a moment believe — but that it operates as
representations usually do, for a purpose, according to a tendency, in a specific
historical, intellectual, and even economic setting" (p. 273).
On Orientalism
Principally a study of 19th-century literary discourse.
strongly influenced by the work of thinkers like Chomsky, Foucault and Gramsci,
engages contemporary realities and has clear political implications
Orientalism is often classed with postmodernist and postcolonial works that share
various degrees of skepticism about representation itself (although a few months
before he died, Said said he considers the book to be in the tradition of "humanistic
critique" and the Enlightenment).
One apt representation Said gives is a poem by Victor Hugo titled "Lui" written for
Napoleon:
Think: What notions of the Orient as ‘other’ do you find depicted here? How does the Orient
compare with the West?
While there is much criticism centered on Said's book, the author himself repeatedly admits
his study's shortcomings both in this chapter, chapter 1 and in his introduction.
Influence
Orientalism is certainly Edward Said's most influential work and has been translated into at
least 36 languages. In October 2003, one month after Said died, a commentator wrote in a
Lebanese newspaper that through Orientalism "Said's critics agree with his admirers that he
has singlehandedly effected a revolution in Middle Eastern studies in the U.S." He cited a
critic who claimed since the publication of Orientalism "U.S. Middle Eastern Studies were
taken over by Edward Said's postcolonial studies paradigm" (Daily Star, October 20, 2003).
Even those who contest its conclusions and criticize its scholarship, like George P. Landow of
Brown University, call it "a major work."
However, Orientalism was not the first to produce criticism of Western knowledge of the
Orient and of Western scholarship: ‘Abd-al-Rahman al Jabarti, the Egyptian chronicler and a
witness to Napoleon’s invasion of Egypt in 1798, for example, had no doubt that the
expedition was as much an epistemological as military conquest.’ Even in recent times (1963,
1969 & 1987) the writings and research of V.G. Kiernan, Bernard S. Cohn and Anwar Abdel
Malek traced the relations between European rule and representations.
Nevertheless, Orientalism is a detailed and influential work within the study of Orientalism
because, as Talal Asad argued, it is “not only a catalogue of Western prejudices about and
misrepresentations of Arabs and Muslims”, but more so an investigation and analysis of the
‘authoritative structure of Orientalist discourse – the closed, self-evident, self-confirming
character of that distinctive discourse which is reproduced again and again through scholarly
texts, travelogues, literary works of imagination, and the obiter dicta of public men [and
women] of affairs.’” Indeed, the book describes how ‘the hallowed image of the Orientalist as
an austere figure unconcerned with the world and immersed in the mystery of foreign scripts
and languages has acquired a dark hue as the murky business of ruling other peoples now
forms the essential and enabling background of his or her scholarship.’.
Criticism
In his book Dangerous Knowledge, British historian Robert Irwin criticizes Said's thesis that
throughout Europe’s history, “every European, in what he could say about the Orient, was a
racist, an imperialist, and almost totally ethnocentric.” Irwin points out that long before
notions like third-worldism and post-colonialism entered the academia, many Orientalists
were committed advocates for Arab and Islamic political causes. Goldziher backed the Urabi
revolt against foreign control of Egypt. The Cambridge Iranologist Edward Granville Browne
became a one-man lobby for Persian liberty during Iran’s constitutional revolution in the
early 20th century. Prince Leone Caetani, an Italian Islamicist, opposed his country’s
occupation of Libya, for which he was denounced as a “Turk.” And Massignon may have
been the first Frenchman to take up the Palestinian Arab cause.
George P. Landow is a professor of English and Art History at Brown University in the
United States. According to Landow, Orientalism certainly has had a great influence on
postcolonial theory since its publication in 1978. However, many questions have been raised
by Said’s manifesto.
Landow, in addition to finding Said's scholarship lacking, chides Said for ignoring the
non-Arab Asian countries, non-Western imperialism, the occidentalist ideas that abound
in East towards the Western, and gender issues in Orientalism.
Landow also finds Orientalism's political focus harmful to students of literature since it
has led to the political study of literature at the expense of philological, literary, and
rhetorical issues.
Landow points out that Said’s arguments are made by focusing only on the Middle East
and completely ignore China, Japan, and South East Asia. While Said criticises the West’s
homogenisation of the East, he himself generalizes “the orient” by limiting his debate to
one specific region.
Said failed to capture the essence of the Middle East, not least by overlooking important
works by Egyptian and Arabic scholars.
In addition to poor knowledge about the history of European and non-European
imperialism, another of Landow’s criticisms is that Said sees only the influence of the
West on the East in colonialism. Landow argues that these influences were not simply
one-way, but cross-cultural, and that Said fails to take into account other societies or
factors within the East.
One of the principal claims made by Landow is that Said did not allow the views of other
scholars to feature in his analysis; therefore, he committed “the greatest single scholarly
sin” in Orientalism.
Other critics discuss Said’s background when considering his point of view and his ability to
give a balanced academic assessment of Orientalism. Edward Said was born in the British
Mandate of Palestine to a wealthy family who sent him to the Anglican school of St George
in Jerusalem then to Victoria College in Cairo which Said himself referred to as “designed by
the British to bring up a generation of Arabs with natural ties to Britain”. After studying at
Victoria College he went to live in America at the age of 15 and then went on to study at
numerous academic institutions, and critics cite this as placing him outside the issues he
writes about in his book. Edward Said had an exceptionally privileged upbringing from a
financial perspective financed by his father whom Said described as “overbearing and
uncommunicative” in his book “Out of Place” (1999). This upbringing would place Said in
the “system” that forms much of the focus of his book and which depicts Orientalism as
facilitator of British and French white man's burden in the Arab world.
Bernard Lewis, in his publication Islam and the West, highlights what he considers to be
many historical and ethical errors and omissions from Said’s book and also highlights the
political undertones, citing examples of imperialist administrators' publications being
referenced as Orientalist academic work to portray Said’s hypotheses. Lewis also goes on to
summarize why he feels that Said’s work is so popular:
“There is, as anyone who has browsed a college bookshop knows, a broad market for
simplified versions of complex problems.”
Lewis and other critics of Said’s work feel that omissions and inaccuracies are an attempt by
the author to convey his “attitude” and feelings on Orientalism as academic study to underpin
his personal beliefs and causes.