Orientalism

by

Edward W. Said

The Orient Symbol Analysis

The Orient Symbol Icon

The Orient represents Western consciousness’s collective vision of the Near East (Turkey, Israel, Palestine, Lebanon, Syria, Jordan, Iraq, and the Arabian Peninsula) and beyond (India, Indochina, China, and Japan) beginning in ancient Greek and persisting up to the contemporary era. It is an imaginary space invented by the West that says much more about how the West sees itself than anything else. As such, the Orientalist discourse often deploys the Orient as a mirror through which Europe can see and understand itself, or as a theater where Europe can work out its ideas about itself and the world. As a concept, the Orient is associated with unfathomable antiquity and important contributions to human history. But the Orientalist makes a sharp distinction between the Orient’s glorious past and its current debasement. The conceptual Orient is hegemonic and unitary, and it is conservative and old-fashioned (if not backward). It is also characterized by unthinking religious fervor. Its people are a unitary, undifferentiated mass without minds of their own, with conventional Orientalists casting Oriental subjects as irrational and unintelligent. Orientalism also portrays the Orient as a place of danger and seductive promise. Moreover, Orientalists see the Orient as a place cannot be trusted to take care of itself and therefore must be subjugated and ruled by more rational and mature societies, like those of Great Britain, France, or America.

The Orient Quotes in Orientalism

The Orientalism quotes below all refer to the symbol of The Orient. For each quote, you can also see the other characters and themes related to it (each theme is indicated by its own dot and icon, like this one:
The West’s View of the Eastern World Theme Icon
).
Introduction Quotes

It will be clear to the reader […] that by Orientalism I mean several things, all of them, in my opinion, interdependent. The most readily accepted definition for Orientalism is an academic one, and indeed the label still serves in a number of academic institutions. Anyone who teaches, writes about, or researches the Orient—and this applies whether the person is an anthropologist, sociologist, historian, or philologist—either in its specific or its general aspects, is an Orientalist and what he or she does is Orientalism. Compared with Oriental studies or area studies, it is true that the term Orientalism is less preferred by specialists today, both because it is too vague and general and because it connotes the high-handed executive attitude of nineteenth-century and early-twentieth-century European colonialism […But] Orientalism lives on academically through its doctrines and theses about the Orient and the Oriental.

Related Characters: Edward Said (speaker), Orientalists , Oriental Subject
Related Symbols: The Orient
Page Number: 2
Explanation and Analysis:

Orientalism responded more to the culture that produced it than to its putative object, which was also produced by the West. Thus the history of Orientalism has both an internal consistency and a highly articulated set of relationships to the dominant culture surrounding it. My analyses consequently try to show the field’s shape and internal organization, its pioneers, patriarchal authorities, canonical texts, and new authorities; I also try to explain how Orientalism borrowed and was frequently informed by “strong” ideas, doctrines, and trends in the ruling culture.

Related Characters: Edward Said (speaker)
Related Symbols: The Orient
Page Number: 22
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 1, Part 2 Quotes

The two aspects of the Orient that set it off from the West in this pair of plays will remain essential motifs of European imaginative geography. A line is drawn between two continents. Europe is powerful and articulate; Asia is defeated and distant. Aeschylus represents Asia, makes her speak in the person of the aged Persian queen, Xerxes’ mother. It is Europe that articulates the Orient; this articulation is the prerogative, not of a puppet master, but of a genuine creator, whose life-giving power represents, animates, constitutes the otherwise silent and dangerous space beyond familiar boundaries. There is an analogy between Aeschylus’s orchestra, which contains the Asiatic world as the playwright conceives it, and the learned envelope of Orientalist scholarship, which also will hold in the vast, amorphous Asiatic sprawl for sometimes sympathetic but always dominating scrutiny. Secondly, there is the motif of the Orient as insinuating danger.

Related Characters: Edward Said (speaker), Orientalists , Oriental Subject
Related Symbols: The Orient
Page Number: 57
Explanation and Analysis:

Not for nothing did Islam come to symbolize terror, devastation, the demonic, hordes or hated barbarians. For Europe, Islam was a lasting trauma. Until the end of the seventeenth century the “Ottoman peril” lurked alongside Europe to represent for the whole of Christian civilization a constant danger, and in time European civilization incorporated that peril and its lore, its great events, figures, virtues, and vices, as something woven into the fabric of life. […] the European representation of the Muslim, Ottoman, or Arab was always a way of controlling the redoubtable Orient, and to a certain extent the same is true of the methods of contemporary learned Orientalists, whose subject is not so much the East itself as the East made known, and therefore less fearsome, to the Western reading public.

Related Characters: Edward Said (speaker), Oriental Subject
Related Symbols: The Orient
Page Number: 59-60
Explanation and Analysis:

Our initial descriptions of Orientalism as a learned field now acquires a new concreteness. A field is often an enclosed space. The idea of representation is a theatrical one: the Orient is the stage on which the whole East is confined. On this stage will appear figures whose role it is to represent the larger whole from which they emanate. The Orient then seems to be, not an unlimited extension beyond the familiar European world, but rather a closed field, a theatrical stage affixed to Europe. An Orientalist is but the particular specialist in knowledge for which Europea at large is responsible, in the way that an audience is historically and culturally responsible for (and responsive to) the dramas technically put together by the dramatist.

Related Characters: Edward Said (speaker), Orientalists , Oriental Subject
Related Symbols: The Orient
Page Number: 63
Explanation and Analysis:

The didactic quality of the Orientalist representation cannot be detached from the rest of the performance. In a learned work like the Bibliothèque orientale, which was the result of systematic study and research, the author imposes a disciplinary order upon the material he has worked on; in addition, he wants to make it clear to the reader that what the printed page delivers is an ordered, disciplined judgement of the material. What is thus conveyed by the Bibliothèque is an idea of Orientalism’s power and effectiveness, which everywhere remind the reader that henceforth in order to get at the Orient he must pass through the learned grids and codes provided by the Orientalist.

Related Characters: Edward Said (speaker)
Related Symbols: The Orient
Page Number: 66-67
Explanation and Analysis:

As a discipline representing institutionalized Western knowledge of the Orient, Orientalism thus comes to exert a three-way force, on the Orient, on the Orientalist, and on the Western “consumer” of Orientalism. It would be wrong, I think, to underestimate the strength of the three-way relationship thus established. For the Orient (“out there” towards the East) is corrected, even penalized, for lying outside the boundaries of European society, “our” world; the Orient is thus Orientalized, a process that not only marks the Orient as the province of the Orientalist but also forces the uninitiated Western reader to accept Orientalist codifications […] as the true Orient. Truth, in short, becomes a function of learned judgement, not of the material itself, which in time seems to owe even its existence to the Orientalist.

Related Characters: Edward Said (speaker), Orientalists
Related Symbols: The Orient
Page Number: 67
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 1, Part 3 Quotes

Because Egypt was saturated with meaning for the arts, sciences, and government, its role was to be the stage on which actions of a world-historical significance would take place. By taking Egypt, then, a modern power would naturally demonstrate its strength and justify history; Egypt’s own destiny was to be annexed, to Europe preferably. In addition, this power would also enter a history whose common element was defined by figures no less great than Homer, Alexander, Caesar, Plato, Solon, and Pythagoras, who graced the Orient with their presence there. The Orient, in short, existed as a set of values attached, not to its modern realities, but to a series of valorized contacts it had had with a distant European past. This is a pure example of the textual, schematic attitude I have been referring to.

Related Characters: Edward Said (speaker), Napoleon, Jean-Baptiste-Joseph Fourier
Related Symbols: The Orient
Page Number: 84-85
Explanation and Analysis:

In the Suez Canal idea we see the logical conclusion of Orientalist thought and, more interesting, Orientalist effort. To the West, Asia had once represented silent distance and alienation; Islam was militant hostility to European Christianity. To overcome such redoubtable constants the Orient needed first to be known, then invaded and possessed, then re-created by scholars, soldiers, and judges who disinterred forgotten languages, histories, races, and cultures in order to posit them—beyond the modern Orientalist’s ken—as the true classical Orient that could be used to judge and rule the modern Orient. The obscurity faded to be replaced by hothouse entities; the Orient was a scholar’s word, signifying what modern Europe had recently made of the still peculiar East. De Lesseps and his canal finally destroyed the Orient’s distance, its cloistered intimacy away from the West, its perdurable exoticism.

Related Characters: Edward Said (speaker), Orientalists , Napoleon, Ferdinand de Lesseps
Related Symbols: The Orient
Page Number: 91-92
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 1, Part 4 Quotes

As anticolonialism sweeps and indeed unifies the entire Oriental world, the Orientalist damns the whole business not only as a nuisance but as an insult to the Western democracies. As momentous, generally important issues face the world—issues involving nuclear destruction, catastrophically scarce resources, unprecedented human demands for equality, justice, and economic parity—popular caricatures of the Orient are exploited by politicians whose source of ideological supply is not only the half-literate technocrat but the superliterate Orientalist. The legendary Arabists in the State Department warn of Arab plans to take over the world. The perfidious Chinese, half-naked Indians, and passive Muslims are described as vulture for “our” largesse and are damned when “we lose them” to communism or to their unregenerate Oriental instincts: the difference is scarcely significant.

Related Characters: Edward Said (speaker), Orientalists , Oriental Subject
Related Symbols: The Orient
Page Number: 108
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 2, Part 2 Quotes

What is given on the page and in the museum case is a truncated exaggeration, like many of Sacy’s Oriental extracts, whose purpose is to exhibit a relationship between the science (or scientist) and the object, not one between the object and nature. Read almost any page of Renan on Arabic, Hebrew, Aramaic, or proto-Semitic and you read a fact of power, by which the Orientalist philologist’s authority summons out of the library at will examples of man’s speech, and ranges them there surrounded by a suave European prose that points out defects, virtues, barbarisms, and shortcomings in the language, the people, and the civilization. The tone and the tense of the exhibition are cast almost uniformly in the contemporary present, so that one is given an impression of a pedagogical demonstration during which the scholar-scientist stands before us on a lecture-laboratory platform, creating, confining, and judging the material he discusses.

Related Characters: Edward Said (speaker), Orientalists , Silvestre de Sacy, Ernest Renan
Related Symbols: The Orient
Page Number: 142-143
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 2, Part 3 Quotes

Unlike [others], Lane was able to submerge himself amongst the natives, to live as they did, to conform to their habits […]. Lest that imply Lane’s having lost his objectivity, he goes on to say that he conformed only to the words […] of the Koran, and that he was always aware of his difference from an essentially alien culture. Thus while one portion of Lane’s identity floats easily in an unsuspecting Muslim sea, a submerged part retains its secret European power, to comment on, acquire, possess everything around it.

The Orientalist can imitate the Orient without the opposite being true. What he says about the Orient is therefore to be understood as a description obtained in a one-way exchange: as they spoke and behaved, he observed and wrote down. […] And what he wrote was intended as useful knowledge, not for them, but for Europe and its various disseminative institutions.

Related Characters: Edward Said (speaker), Orientalists , Oriental Subject , Edward William Lane
Related Symbols: The Orient
Page Number: 160-161
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 2, Part 4 Quotes

In the system of knowledge about the Orient, the Orient is less a place than a topos, a set of references, a congeries of characteristics, that seems to have its origin in a quotation, or a fragment of a text, or a citation from someone’s work on the Orient, or some bit of a previous imagining, or an amalgam of all these. Direct observation or circumstantial description of the Orient are the fictions presented by writing on the Orient, yet invariably these are totally secondary to systematic tasks of another sort. In Lamartine, Nerval, and Flaubert, the Orient is a re-presentation of canonical material guided by an aesthetic and executive will capable of producing interest in the reader.

Related Characters: Edward Said (speaker), Napoleon, Gustave Flaubert, Alphonse Lamartine, Gérard de Nerval
Related Symbols: The Orient
Page Number: 177
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 3, Part 1  Quotes

“I would look for hours at South America, or Africa, or Australia, and lose myself in all the glories of exploration. At that time there were many blank spaces on the earth, and when I saw one that looked particularly inviting on a map […] I would put my finger on it and say, When I grow up, I will go there.”

Seventy years or so before Marlowe said this, it did not trouble Lamartine that what on a map was a blank space was inhabited by natives […] The important thing was go dignify simple conquest with an idea, to turn the appetite for more geographical space into a theory about the special relationship between geography on the one hand and civilized or uncivilized people on the other.

Related Characters: Edward Said (speaker), Oriental Subject
Related Symbols: The Orient
Page Number: 216
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 3, Part 2 Quotes

It was assumed that if languages were as distinct from each other as the linguists said they were, then too the language users—their minds, cultures, potentials, and even their bodies—were different in similar ways. And these distinctions had the force of ontological, empirical truth behind them […]

The point to be emphasized is that this truth about the distinctive differences between races, civilizations, and languages was (or pretended to be) radical and ineradicable. It went to the bottom of things […] it set the real boundaries between human beings, on which races, nations, and civilizations were constructed; it forced vision away from the common, as well as plural, human realities like joy, suffering, political organization, forcing attention instead in the downward and backward direction of immutable origins.

Related Characters: Edward Said (speaker), Orientalists , Oriental Subject
Related Symbols: The Orient
Page Number: 233
Explanation and Analysis:

Our of such a coercive framework, by which a modern “colored” man is chained irrevocably to the general truths formulated about his prototypical linguistic, anthropological, and doctrinal forbears by a white European scholar, the work of the great twentieth-century Oriental experts in England and France derived. To this framework these experts also brought their private mythology and obsessions. […] Each […] believed his vision of things Oriental was individual, self-created out of some intensely personal encounter with the Orient, Islam, or the Arabs; each expressed general contempt for official knowledge held about the East. […] Yet in the final analysis they all […] expressed the traditional Western hostility to and fear of the Orient.

Related Characters: Edward Said (speaker), Orientalists , Oriental Subject , T. E. Lawrence
Related Symbols: The Orient
Page Number: 237
Explanation and Analysis:

The main issue for [early 20th- century Orientalists] was preserving the Orient and Islam under the control of the White Man.

A new dialectic emerges out of this project. What is required of the Oriental expert is no longer simply “understanding”: now the Orient must be made to perform, its power must be enlisted on the side of “our” values, civilization, interests, goals. Knowledge of the Orient is directly translated into activity, and the results give rise to new currents of thought and trends in the Orient. But these in turn will require from the White Man a new assertion of control, this time not as the author of a scholarly work on the Orient but as the maker of contemporary history, of the Orient as an urgent actuality […]

Related Characters: Edward Said (speaker), Oriental Subject , White Man , T. E. Lawrence
Related Symbols: The Orient
Page Number: 238
Explanation and Analysis:

[The] metamorphosis of a relatively innocuous philological subspeciality into a capacity for managing political movements, administering colonies, making nearly apocalyptic statements representing the White Man’s difficult civilizing mission—all this is something at work within a purportedly liberal culture, one full of concern for its vaunted norms of catholicity, plurality, and open-mindedness. In fact, what took place was the very opposite of liberal: the hardening of doctrine and meaning, imparted by “science,” into “truth.” For if such truth reserved for itself the right to judge the Orient as immutably Oriental in the ways I have indicated, then liberality was no more than a form of oppression and mentalistic prejudice.

Related Characters: Edward Said (speaker)
Related Symbols: The Orient
Page Number: 254
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 3, Part 3 Quotes

Because we have become accustomed to think of a contemporary expert on some branch of the Orient […] as a specialist in “area studies,” we have lost a vivid sense of how, until around World War II, the Orientalist was considered to be a generalist […] who had highly developed skills for making summational statements. By summational statements I mean that in formulating a relatively uncomplicated idea, say, about Arabic grammar or Indian religion, the Orientalist would be understood […] to be making a statement about the Orient as a whole, thereby summing it up. Thus every discrete study of one bit of Oriental material would also confirm in a summary way the profound Orientality of the material. And since it was commonly believed that the Orient hung together in some profoundly organic way, it made good hermeneutical sense for the Orientalist scholar to regard the material evidence he dealt with as ultimately leading to a better understanding of such things and the Oriental character, mind, ethos, or world-spirit.

Related Characters: Edward Said (speaker), Orientalists , Oriental Subject , Hamilton Gibb, Silvestre de Sacy, Louis Massignon
Related Symbols: The Orient
Page Number: 255
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 3, Part 4 Quotes

Thus if the Arab occupies space enough for attention, it is as a negative value. He is seen as the disrupter of Israel’s and the West’s existence, or in another view of the same thing, as a surmountable obstacle to Israel’s creation in 1948. Insofar as this Arab has any history, it is part of the history given him […] by Orientalist tradition, and later, the Zionist tradition. Palestine was seen—by Lamartine and the early Zionists—as an empty desert waiting to burst into bloom; such inhabitants as it had were supposed to be inconsequential nomads possessing no real claim on the land and therefore no cultural or national reality. Thus the Arab is conceived of now as a shadow that dogs the Jew. In that shadow—because Arabs and Jews are Oriental Semites—can be placed whatever traditional, latent mistrust a Westerner feels towards the Oriental.

Related Characters: Edward Said (speaker), Alphonse Lamartine
Related Symbols: The Orient
Page Number: 286
Explanation and Analysis:

[Bernard Lewis] will, for example, recite the Arab case against Zionism […] without mentioning—anywhere, in any of his writings—that there was such a thing as a Zionist invasion and colonization of Palestine despite and in conflict with the native Arab inhabitants. No Israeli would deny this, but Lewis the Orientalist historian simply leaves it out. […]

One would find this kind of procedure less objectionable as political propaganda—which is what, of course, it is—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 like Lewis writing about Muslims and Arabs are, by definition, by training, by the mere fact of their Westernness.

Related Characters: Edward Said (speaker), Orientalists , Oriental Subject
Related Symbols: The Orient
Page Number: 318-319
Explanation and Analysis:
Get the entire Orientalism LitChart as a printable PDF.
Orientalism PDF

The Orient Symbol Timeline in Orientalism

The timeline below shows where the symbol The Orient appears in Orientalism. The colored dots and icons indicate which themes are associated with that appearance.
Introduction
The West’s View of the Eastern World Theme Icon
Knowledge and Power Theme Icon
Belief, Consensus, and Reality Theme Icon
...long history of Europe (mostly France and Great Britain) defining itself by comparison to “the Orient”—which mostly coincides with the part of the world typically identified as the “Middle East” or... (full context)
The West’s View of the Eastern World Theme Icon
Knowledge and Power Theme Icon
Belief, Consensus, and Reality Theme Icon
Western discourse creates and maintains the idea of the “Orient.” Although it maps onto real places with real people and cultures, Orientalism is more invested... (full context)
The West’s View of the Eastern World Theme Icon
The Persistence of Racism Theme Icon
Western cultural hegemony is predicated on the idea of European superiority, especially—although not exclusively—over the Orient and its peoples. Thus, the Orient emerges from ideas about who or what is Oriental... (full context)
Knowledge and Power Theme Icon
The Personal as Political Theme Icon
...give a sense of urgency to subjects important to their society’s political interests. Discourses like Orientalism affect civil society’s interests and beliefs by “distribut[ing …] geopolitical awareness” (specifically, Britain’s, France’s, and... (full context)
Belief, Consensus, and Reality Theme Icon
The Personal as Political Theme Icon
...there following the end of World War II. Moreover, since about the 9th century, the Orient has served as a handy Western shorthand for both Arabs and Islam. (full context)
Knowledge and Power Theme Icon
The Personal as Political Theme Icon
The main characteristic of Anglo-French and American Orientalism is “intellectual authority” over the Orient. Analyzing how authorities on the Orient locate themselves relative... (full context)
Knowledge and Power Theme Icon
The Personal as Political Theme Icon
...the scholar’s personal investments. To this end, Said points out that he is himself an Oriental subject. He grew up and was educated in two British colonies (Palestine and Egypt) and... (full context)
Chapter 1, Part 1
Knowledge and Power Theme Icon
The Persistence of Racism Theme Icon
Said begins his analysis of Orientalism’s scope by analyzing Arthur James Balfour’s impassioned speech in favor of ongoing British involvement in... (full context)
Knowledge and Power Theme Icon
The Orientalism of Balfour and Cromer, which Said classifies as “modern Orientalism” takes older ideas, repackages them... (full context)
Chapter 1, Part 2
The West’s View of the Eastern World Theme Icon
Knowledge and Power Theme Icon
In the West, the academic discipline of Orientalism is established in 1312, when European universities began to endow chairs of Semitic (Arabic, Hebrew,... (full context)
The West’s View of the Eastern World Theme Icon
Belief, Consensus, and Reality Theme Icon
The Personal as Political Theme Icon
Even the term “Orientalist” says something interesting about the relationship between knowledge and geography, because the Orient is ultimately... (full context)
The West’s View of the Eastern World Theme Icon
Knowledge and Power Theme Icon
The Persistence of Racism Theme Icon
Because of these emotional and imaginative associations, Said explains, the Orient has always signified more than what the West empirically knows about a certain geographic region.... (full context)
The West’s View of the Eastern World Theme Icon
Knowledge and Power Theme Icon
The Persistence of Racism Theme Icon
But a sense of the Orient as dangerous persisted, bolstered by the successful expansion of Muslim control across the Near East... (full context)
The West’s View of the Eastern World Theme Icon
Knowledge and Power Theme Icon
Belief, Consensus, and Reality Theme Icon
The Persistence of Racism Theme Icon
Said sees the discourse of academic Orientalism turning the Orient into a theater that endlessly reproduces European ideas about the Orient. This... (full context)
Knowledge and Power Theme Icon
Belief, Consensus, and Reality Theme Icon
The Persistence of Racism Theme Icon
Islam is a particular target of Orientalist discourse because it is the “outsider” against which medieval Christian Europe defined itself, especially as... (full context)
Chapter 1, Part 3
The West’s View of the Eastern World Theme Icon
Knowledge and Power Theme Icon
Having briefly sketched the history by which Orientalist discourse organizes and describes the Orient, Said turns to Orientalism’s political projects. At first, these... (full context)
The West’s View of the Eastern World Theme Icon
Knowledge and Power Theme Icon
Belief, Consensus, and Reality Theme Icon
It wasn’t until the mid-18th century that the idea of the Orient began to expand beyond Islam, the Arabs, or the Ottomans and into new places like... (full context)
The West’s View of the Eastern World Theme Icon
Belief, Consensus, and Reality Theme Icon
Although Napoleon’s Egyptian expedition fails, it sets the model for future colonial efforts in the Orient. It also gives birth to a cottage industry of Orientalist writings (novels, ethnographies, and travelogues)... (full context)
Chapter 1, Part 4
Knowledge and Power Theme Icon
Belief, Consensus, and Reality Theme Icon
The discourse of Orientalism begins in universities and is associated with a great expansion of knowledge in the West.... (full context)
Knowledge and Power Theme Icon
Belief, Consensus, and Reality Theme Icon
The first characteristic of this period is a growing sense of disenchantment. Early Orientalists produced a body of work that excavated a glorious, glorified, and sanitized Oriental past. With... (full context)
Knowledge and Power Theme Icon
The Personal as Political Theme Icon
In the 19th century, the Orient piques travelers’ curiosity, visitors find the modern Orient disappointing, Orientalists assuage this disappointment by explaining... (full context)
The West’s View of the Eastern World Theme Icon
Knowledge and Power Theme Icon
Belief, Consensus, and Reality Theme Icon
The Persistence of Racism Theme Icon
This attitude sums up what Said sees as a unique and enduring aspect of Orientalism as a geopolitical discourse: the idea that the West is “actor […] spectator, […] judge... (full context)
Chapter 2, Part 1
The West’s View of the Eastern World Theme Icon
Belief, Consensus, and Reality Theme Icon
Thus, what Said calls “modern” (18th- and 19th-century) Orientalism mainly distinguishes itself from its predecessors by an appeal to a quasi-scientific objectivity. The 18th-century... (full context)
Chapter 2, Part 2
The West’s View of the Eastern World Theme Icon
Knowledge and Power Theme Icon
Born in 1757, Silvestre de Sacy was a gifted and devoted student of the Orient who studied Arabic, Syriac, Chaldean, and Hebrew. He ultimately became a scholar, teacher, government consultant,... (full context)
Knowledge and Power Theme Icon
The Personal as Political Theme Icon
Renan displaces the drama of the encounter between the philologist and the Orient (specifically, for him, the study of Semitic languages and people) from a religious framework to... (full context)
Chapter 2, Part 3
The West’s View of the Eastern World Theme Icon
The Persistence of Racism Theme Icon
...his case studies of Sacy and Renan, Said argues that part of the way modern Orientalism entrenched itself was by giving oversimplified cultural generalizations—which were often quite racist—the aura of scientific... (full context)
The West’s View of the Eastern World Theme Icon
Belief, Consensus, and Reality Theme Icon
Said identifies three kinds of people who wrote about their Oriental travels: those who were consciously collecting scientific material to contribute to academic Orientalism; those who... (full context)
Knowledge and Power Theme Icon
Belief, Consensus, and Reality Theme Icon
...interrupts the narrative logic of his work, thus constantly reminding readers of the typically chaotic Orient that Lane must subdue and make it intelligible for his readers. (full context)
Knowledge and Power Theme Icon
Belief, Consensus, and Reality Theme Icon
Said reads Lane’s work not just as an entry in the annals of Orientalism, but as a model for the authoritative stance academic Orientalism sought to maintain. Lane writes... (full context)
Chapter 2, Part 4
Belief, Consensus, and Reality Theme Icon
The Persistence of Racism Theme Icon
Nineteenth-century Europeans in the Orient all seek, like Lane, to distance themselves from—and purge their accounts of—“unsettling” (usually sexual) Oriental... (full context)
The West’s View of the Eastern World Theme Icon
Knowledge and Power Theme Icon
Accounts of Oriental pilgrimages also highlight important differences between French and British writers in 18th- and 19th- century... (full context)
The West’s View of the Eastern World Theme Icon
Belief, Consensus, and Reality Theme Icon
The Persistence of Racism Theme Icon
François-René de Chateaubriand’s Itinéraire tells the story of his trip through the Orient in 1805-1806. In it, he presents the Orient as a “decrepit canvas” to be restored.... (full context)
The West’s View of the Eastern World Theme Icon
Knowledge and Power Theme Icon
Belief, Consensus, and Reality Theme Icon
...the legacy of his writing. This in turn points to one of the attractions of Orientalist discourse, which provides a ready and capacious realm in which a person could leave a... (full context)
Knowledge and Power Theme Icon
Belief, Consensus, and Reality Theme Icon
...notions when he goes east in 1833. His narrative immediately imposes his vision on the Orient. When he doesn’t like what he sees, he refers to Orientalist accounts that (in his... (full context)
Knowledge and Power Theme Icon
Belief, Consensus, and Reality Theme Icon
...and aesthetic” uses of their visits. Key features of the way they talk about the Orient had already been suggested to them by European visions of the Orient—its exoticism, its macabre... (full context)
Knowledge and Power Theme Icon
Belief, Consensus, and Reality Theme Icon
Narratively, Nerval structures his trip as a voyage into the depths of an Orient that Chateaubriand and others had only superficially described. Ultimately, then, Nerval’s Orient becomes nothing more... (full context)
Knowledge and Power Theme Icon
Belief, Consensus, and Reality Theme Icon
It is hard to comprehensively address the Orientalism of Nerval’s countryman, French novelist Gustave Flaubert, because it’s so pervasive in his large body... (full context)
Knowledge and Power Theme Icon
Belief, Consensus, and Reality Theme Icon
The Personal as Political Theme Icon
This points to the paradox at the root of academic Orientalism. In seeking to codify the exotic and strange, it drains the Orient of its living,... (full context)
Knowledge and Power Theme Icon
Belief, Consensus, and Reality Theme Icon
The farther into the 19th century Said’s survey goes, the more any text about the Orient becomes burdened by the discourse’s past and by layers of “interests, official learning, [and] institutional... (full context)
Knowledge and Power Theme Icon
Belief, Consensus, and Reality Theme Icon
The Personal as Political Theme Icon
...in the annual pilgrimage to Mecca. Thus, his observations and generalizations about life in the Orient feel far more compelling than anyone else’s, because he presents himself as a participant rather... (full context)
Belief, Consensus, and Reality Theme Icon
...“regulated college of learning.” By the mid-19th century, it was impossible to think of the Orient as a real place rather than a “domain of […] scholarly rule and […] imperial... (full context)
Chapter 3, Part 1 
Knowledge and Power Theme Icon
Belief, Consensus, and Reality Theme Icon
Doing this kind of investigative work reveals the inherently political nature of contemporary Orientalism. As a discourse, it is preconditioned by the language and the culture in which it... (full context)
The West’s View of the Eastern World Theme Icon
Belief, Consensus, and Reality Theme Icon
The Persistence of Racism Theme Icon
Said identifies a manifest and a latent strain of Orientalist discourse. Manifest Orientalism is produced by academics in universities and learned societies; latent Orientalism is... (full context)
The West’s View of the Eastern World Theme Icon
Knowledge and Power Theme Icon
This section explores how incorporation and assimilation of the Orient in a geopolitical sense affected Orientalist discourse. The language of empire had become the common... (full context)
Knowledge and Power Theme Icon
Belief, Consensus, and Reality Theme Icon
Orientalism also serves empire because it articulates a rationale for territorial expansion. For example, when the... (full context)
Chapter 3, Part 2
Knowledge and Power Theme Icon
...work of British novelist and poet Rudyard Kipling, much of which is set in the Orient, to explore latent Orientalist discourse in the late 19th early 20th centuries. Kipling often writes... (full context)
The West’s View of the Eastern World Theme Icon
Belief, Consensus, and Reality Theme Icon
The Persistence of Racism Theme Icon
One of the most harmful beliefs of modern and contemporary Orientalist discourse is that Jewish and Muslim people—Semitic people—specifically are “primitive,” unable to transcend their “tent... (full context)
Knowledge and Power Theme Icon
Belief, Consensus, and Reality Theme Icon
The Persistence of Racism Theme Icon
With increasing colonial involvement, the Orientalist project shifts to compelling the Orient to serve European interests. This requires the White Man’s... (full context)
The West’s View of the Eastern World Theme Icon
Belief, Consensus, and Reality Theme Icon
As, the tenor of Orientalism shifts from an academic to an “instrumental attitude,” Orientalists starts seeing themselves more as representatives... (full context)
Belief, Consensus, and Reality Theme Icon
The Persistence of Racism Theme Icon
The need to see the modern Orient as it is—but “see” in an Orientalist sense of categorizing, organizing and extracting intellectual and... (full context)
The West’s View of the Eastern World Theme Icon
Belief, Consensus, and Reality Theme Icon
The Personal as Political Theme Icon
...vantage point, in the inter- and post-World War era, the ongoing need to control the Orient becomes ever more strongly associated with fearmongering about Islam and Muslim people. And this happens... (full context)
Chapter 3, Part 3
Knowledge and Power Theme Icon
Belief, Consensus, and Reality Theme Icon
...to the destabilizing force of European colonialism, Massignon cannot transcend the essentializing idea that modern Oriental subjects are first and foremost Semites—that is, a vestige of an ancient past perfectly preserved... (full context)
Knowledge and Power Theme Icon
Belief, Consensus, and Reality Theme Icon
...contributions of Hamilton Gibb, whose work represents the culmination of the “academic-research consensus,” of contemporary Orientalism both because of his status in the field and because, unlike his 18th- and 19th-century... (full context)
Belief, Consensus, and Reality Theme Icon
The Persistence of Racism Theme Icon
The Orient, then, is intensely and carefully created by Orientalism. It is not a reflection of reality.... (full context)
Chapter 3, Part 4
Knowledge and Power Theme Icon
Belief, Consensus, and Reality Theme Icon
The Persistence of Racism Theme Icon
...Studies at Princeton University in the 1960s. Berger not only exemplifies the newest iteration of Orientalism’s disdain for its subject of study but also the post-WWII shift from philology and the... (full context)
Knowledge and Power Theme Icon
The Persistence of Racism Theme Icon
In this American social sciences version of Orientalism, the study of language and literature is only important to serve military, political, or business... (full context)
Knowledge and Power Theme Icon
Belief, Consensus, and Reality Theme Icon
...a world empire until after WWII, it had imperial ambitions (albeit limited ones) in the Orient in the 19th century, too. When the American Oriental Society was founded in 1843, its... (full context)
The West’s View of the Eastern World Theme Icon
Belief, Consensus, and Reality Theme Icon
...his work, because there can never be productive cultural exchange between the West and the Orient. The more that Islam—in the form of Arab nationalist movements—demonstrates its opposition to the West,... (full context)
Knowledge and Power Theme Icon
Belief, Consensus, and Reality Theme Icon
If Gibb and Grunebaum represent a “hard,” overtly geopolitical form of Orientalism, there’s a softer version operating in contemporary area studies departments, which are trying to modernize... (full context)
Belief, Consensus, and Reality Theme Icon
The Persistence of Racism Theme Icon
The Personal as Political Theme Icon
One of the deepest and most entrenched truisms of Orientalism is the “simplicity” of mind possessed by the Oriental subject. This belief underwrites both antisemitic... (full context)
The West’s View of the Eastern World Theme Icon
Knowledge and Power Theme Icon
Belief, Consensus, and Reality Theme Icon
The Personal as Political Theme Icon
Contemporary Orientalism is, then, a particularly dangerous form of political propaganda because it presents itself as an... (full context)