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Orientalism Polemics: In Praisal of Edward Said
The following paper seeks to investigate the burning controversial issues
and polemical discussions generated by Edward Said’s Orientalism and his
critics..As matter of fact, Orientalism is a galvanizing book that catapulted
his author into international stage. It has also exerted an influential
impact on many academic disciplines. In addition, it has triggered various
reactions ranging from positive appraisal to a clear rejection of the
book and attack of his author.
For those who attack the book, they base their refutations on many grounds:
first, they appreciate the positive contributions of Orientalism in exploring
the mystries of the Orient and record its historical heritage. Second,
Orientalism is perceived as a pure academic knowledge not polluted by
colonial sins or biased distortions. They further expound the viewpoint
that if Orientalism happened to distort the others, every culture in its
turn has its own system of prejudgements and stereotypes about the other
cultures. Furthermore, The Orientalist tradition is characterized by heterogeneity
and multivocal voices and not homogenization. Finally, it is based on
humanistic noble mission to explore and civilize the “fellow brothers”
who are still living in utter darkness and backwardness. Conversely, Following
Edward Said model, the anti- Orientalism’s arguments are strikingly more
convincing and founded on firmly solid grounds. They claim that the Orientalists
have produced a grotesque misrepresantation about the Orient in general
and Islam in particular. Moreover, they contend that racism, Eurocentric
diffusionism, anti-Humanism and imperialism have been the salient foundations
of Orientalist discourse.Indeed, Said’s anti-Orientalism standpoint is
deep-seated to be shaken by implausible claims or superficial speculations.
1- The problematic nature of defining Orientalism:
The term Orientalism appeared in England in 1889 and in France in 1799.Yet,
the early beginnings of the term is debatable. Some consider the time
of the Crusades as the initial stage of Orientalism while others consider
the attempt of John of Damascus during the seven century to teach Christians
the principles of Islamic Dialectics, as the official onset of this discipline.
Other historians consider the rise of Orientalism was in1312 after the
church consensus decree to establish several classes for teaching and
learning Arabic in different European universities. During this period
downward, many westerners have studied Islam and Arabic, translated the
meaning of the Holy Quran and other Islamic literary works. Among the
first orientalists we can cite the French monk Jerbert, who was appointed
the Pope of the Roman church in 999 after learning in the Andalus, Pierrrele
Aénéré 1092-1156 and Gérard de Grémone1114-1187. in addition to fanatical
figures like A.J.Arberry who wrote many books such as Islam Today, An
Introduction to Sophism, and Translation of the Quran , A. Geom and Baron
Garra de Vaux, H.A.R.Gibb, Gold Ziher, S.M.Zweimer, G.Von Grunbaum, A.J.Wensink,
k.Gragg, M.Green, D.B.Macdonald, and many others.
My point of departure is to provide a definition of the phenomenon of
Orientalism. Etymologically, the Orient stands for the distant and the
source of the sunrise, simply a synonym for the Asiatic East as a whole.
According to such definition, it has a geographical meaning
:the Orient as a whole including China, India, Persia and the Islamic
territories. As a discipline, it denotes the long tradition of academic
studies established by western scholars to discover the whole Eastern
civilizations and various aspects of the Oriental world’s cultural heritage,
including religions, history and languages. Orientalism in this sense
is qualified as a pure academic pursuit and as a means of cultural interaction
with the other oriental cultures.
With the publication of Said’s monumental book Orientalism, new rebellious
dimensions emerge against the old-fashioned assumptions of Orientalism.
It no longer stands for pure scholastic knowledge, but instead represents
negative connotations and projects the Western ideological views on the
East.
For Said, Orientalism is a discourse tightly linked to power and domination.
Following the footsteps of Foucault, Said believes that there is nothing
as disinterested or neutrally objective knowledge. Indeed, every attempt
for “savoir” is a will to “pouvoir” according to Foucault. Put it differently,
Orientalism as a discourse is not necessary a category equal or opposable
to language, speech, writing, thought or ideas. It participates in all
of these but is not reducible to any of them. To speak of discourse is
to speak of a network of attitudes, biased views, modelled clichés and
perceptions in their totality. In his introduction to Orientalism, Said
explains the effective usefulness and applicability of the Discourse notion
to Orientalism: “ I have found it useful here to employ Micheal Foucault’s
notion...to identify Orientalism. My contention is that without examining
Orientalism as a discourse, one can not possibly understand the enormously
systematic discipline by which European culture was able to manage -and
even produce- the Orient politically, sociologically,militarily, ideologically,
scientifically, and imaginatively” .
Said’s definition is more comprehensive and inclusive. It does not limits
itself to the pure scholastic pursuit, but instead comprises the other
aspects and sites . That is, it provides multi-dimentional qualifications
of Orientalism as “a generic Western approach to the Orient”, “ a western
style for dominating, restructuring, and having authority over the Orient”(3),
“lenses of vision, thought and perception”, "A distribution of geopolitical
awareness into aesthetic, scholarly, economic, sociological, historical,
and philological texts." (12) , “ a textual archive of all negative
attributes about the Orient”, “a political doctrine of Western hegemony”,
“an amalgam of facts and fiction, of images and lexicograghies”, “a will
to domination over the Orient”(5) and a “systematic topic of learning,
discovery and practice”.
Owing to Said’s comprehensive framework , a huge wave of literary revisionism
was born and critics feel bound to cite Said’s view that many literary
works such as Conrad’s Heart of Darkness, Verdi’s Aida, , Kipling’s Kim
are just the sites and configuration of imperial notions about non-Western
world.
In addition, Edward Said distinguishes between two types of Orientalism;
Latent and Manifest. The former also is known as the classical Orientalism
whereas the latter is a modern one.The former covers the historical period
from the ancient Greece to the pre-eighteenth century, while the latter
elucidates the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries when Orientalism became
an established “corporate institution” tightly integrated through invisible
network of the intelligence communities, business corporations, political
establishments and academic departments all devoted to reinforce the West
authority and superiority over the Orient. Withing this new mode of reference,
the orientalist was no longer exclusively an intellectual scholar, but
also a politician and administrator like Lord Cromer and Balfour,or an
imperial agent like T.E. Lawrence and Sir William Jones. Orientalism “is
a style of thought based upon an ontological and epistemological distinction
made between the Orient and the Occident.”
Despite this historical division in terms of Latent and Manifest, Said
maintains that “the core of the Orientalist dogma” remained intact.(234)
2- Orientalism polemic between Misrepresentations and accurate Knowledge:
The issue of Representation of othe societies, races and cultures is
of paramount importance in Orientalist discourse. It triggered polarized
views and conflicting stances. While Said strongly argues that “all representations
are misrepresentations.”(21), his opponents express their incredulity
in this regard.They often claim that every culture not only shapes the
outlook and vision of the people belonging to it, but also imposes corrections
on the other cultures and communities. Put it differently, every culture
has its own stereotypes and prejudices on the other societies.This holds
true for all religions, institutions, ethnic groups and political parties
as well. By way of illustration, Islam divide communities into antithetical
poles: the homeland of the faithful believers and the territories of the
atheists and pagans.In addition, many ethnic groups believe in supremacy
and superiority over the others. Therefore, it is not only the Western
culture that misrepresents the others, but also the others apply the same
logic in their portrayal of other cultures.
In the second place, Many critics express their disappointment at Said’s
work. Nadim Al-Bitar for example, asks: “ how could Said generalize and
claim that Orientalism in its entirety is characterized by animosity to
Islam? How could he use such absolute sweeping statements,without qualification,
and then claim that his generalization are scientific? Has he actually
read, in depth or even superficially, all sixty thousand of these books
and did not find in them anything to contradict his discoveries regarding
the nature of Orientalism and the stance of inferiority from-birth of
the East?” Said indeed estimates that about sixty thousand books about
the Islamic Orient were published between 1800 and 1950. Other Arab secular
intellectuals such as Jalal Alazm, Hasan Ali Alsaghir,Walid Nuwayhid and
others investigate the positive contribution of Orientalism to the study
of the Quran and presenting Islam to the Western world.They also believe
that the Orientalist research is of great value that should be studied
cautiously with openness and not hostility.They also assign an important
role to German Orientalism of the nineteenth century that viewed Islam
as a classical culture-deed but possessed of great value and worthy of
the same philological scrutiny and attention granted to studies of ancient
Greece and Rome. In the process, they performed “funeral services” which
presumed to bring the remains of a noble culture to eternal rest, accompanied
by great respect and veneration.
In the third place, Said was accused of reductionism and selectivity in
the sense that he downplays the importance of courageous Orientalist figures
who shows their sympathy and fascination and deep respect toward the Orient
in general and Islam in particular like Louis Massingnon, Jaques Berque
, Maxime Rodinson and Lawrence. Finally, they argue that Orientalism deformations
of Islam should be understood within the Enlightenment context in the
eighteenth century when Reason relaced faith and philosophy filled the
void of religion.They strenghten their assumptions by Neitzsche’s motto
‘God is dead’ and Karl Marx’s proposition ‘Religion is the opium of the
people’.That is, the vilification of religion, be it Christianity or Islam,
was the norm and the fashion of the Enlightenment.
In his turn, Said considers his critics views as superflous and unsubstantial
for many reasons: for a start, Louis Massignon’s high respect for Islamic
spiritual sophism of Alhalaj should not hide the fact that he was an adviser
for the French government against Muslims in North Africa .He was also
appointed to the rank of the administrator of the French colonies in North
Africa mainly in Algiers.Besides, he served in the French army for five
years during the World War I.What is worse, his consultations led to the
horrific massacre of killing more than million Moslims in Algiers. As
far as Lawrence is concerned, he was an imperial agent and a British army
officer in the Islamic Orient. It is true that he was enthusiastic about
the freedom of the Arab countries from Ottman empire, but in his Seven
Pillars of Wisdom,he considered that the true independence of these Arab
countries could be achieved only under the leadership of Britain.A mere
appeal to substitue the Ottman rule with the British imperialism!Concerning
Rodinson and Berque, Said does not deny their importance but their writings
are confiscated within the prison house of Orientalist Orientalism.
Secondly, Said’s justification for his marginalization of the German scholarship
is due to his adoption of Foucauldian methodology; according to which
German Orientalism was not
associated with power and domination .That is why he focuses more on the
French , English and American Orientalist discourses since they are strongly
linked with colonialism.
Against Said and his critics, Hitchens in his article “ Where the twain
Should have Met”asserts that Germany did have an imperial project; Kaiser
Wilhelm II visited Damascus and paid for the restoration of the tomb of
Saladin. In addition, he proposed “Drand nach Osten”- drive to the East-
which involves the stupendous schemes of Berlin-to-Baghdad railway. Therefore
German Orientalism was not an exeption from its Anglo-Franco counterparts.
As for the question of representation, the proportion and scope of distortions
is much wider than the scanty exceptions here and there of few respectful
individual orientalists.In addition, if the rejection of religion was
the norm during the Enlightenment, Said assumes that the slander of Islam
was not limited to the Enlightenment. Instead it dates back to the Medieval
Ages and Renaissance, throughout which Orientalism provided a huge inexhaustible
repertoire of negative images about Islam .The textual literary production
throughout this period, was colored by feelings of antagonism towards
the Saracens and phobia from Islam. That is, the orientalist discourse
was -to use Foucault’s words- “an epistemic violence” against Islam and
Muslims .Bekkaoui(1998:1)considers Medival Spain as the setting for the
escalation of the conflict between the Muslims and the crusaders:
“Medival Spain was the battleground of long and fierce battles between
the crescent and the cross.The Muslims penetrated medival christian consciousness
with a violent trauma, leaving far-reaching wounds in the psyche of Europe.The
easy triumph and rapid spread of Islam in the Iberian Peninsula struck
accute terror in the whole christendom...the christians were shocked and
alarmed. They coud not understand how a “false” religion could possibly
triumph over a true faith. Stereotypes were only means of explanation
,and misrepresenrations of the enemy became a trenchant weapon of religious
warfare”.
the distorted images and misrepresentations of Islam in Orientalist writings
are numerous. In the Divine Comedy, Dante gives a negative stereotype
about the prophet Mohamed -peace and blessing be upon him-through which
the western reader come to judge Islam via these unique codifications
or schematisations:Islam as a name of religion,was relegated to another
insulting label “Mohammedanism”. Dante places Mohamed the messenger of
Allah and great Arab figures such as Ali the fourth caliph, Salahdine
at the last circle of Hell with Satan: “Maometto-Mohamed-turns up in canto
28 of the inferno.He is located in the eighth of thenine circles of Hell,in
the ninth of the ten Bolgian. In Barthélemy d’Herbelot’s Biblioteque Orientale
published in 1697, “Islam is judged as being a fraudulent new version
of some previous experience christianity.” . In other words, There has
been an acute attack on Islam and the prophet Mohamed- peace and blessing
be upon him- as well. Said proves that “ the character of Mohammed in
the Middle Ages was heaped a bundle of attributes that corresponded to
the character of the prophets of the “free spirit” who did arise in Europe
, and claim credence and collect followers. Similarly, since Mohamed was
viewed as the disseminator of a false Revelation, he became the epitome
of lechery, debauchery, sodomy and a whole battery of assorted treacheries,
all of which derived logically from his doctrinal impostures.”
The vilification of the prophet continued under different cliches, sometimes
under the name of Mahound -instead of Mohamed- that refers to the prince
of Darkness in Greek mythology. Other times, the name of Mohamed is harshly
deformed to Mahometto; the first-born child of Satan. In addition in The
Song of Roland, Mohamed is depicted as “ a scoundrel and his followers
as abominable idolaters given to immoral practices such as polygamy and
capable of every sort of satanic wickedness” .Within the same mainstream,
another famous French orientalist Antoine Galland divided history into
two types: sacred and profane(the jews and christians in the first, the
Muslims in the second) . David Roberts expresses his crude comments against
the victorious Islamic troops entring European cities: “splendid cities,once
embellished with temples and edifices now deserted, or reduced by mismanagement
and barbarism of the Muslim creed to a state as savage as wild animals
by which they are surrounded. Often have I gazed on “them” till my heart
actually sickned” . The perception of Islam as a political, religious,
economic, and social threat reflects ignorance of this religion. It is
ignorance of the reality of Islam that has provided the fertile land for
the growth of tolerance, co-existence and respect for the others.
Furthermore, Islam was fixed, laid out to the Orientalist attitude, imprisoned
in a closed system, in which objects are what they are because they are
what they are ,for once and for all time.What is worse, The Orientalist
discourse is overgenerlising.Vocabulary and items are all declarative
and self-evident;the tense they employ is the timeless eternal, they convey
an impression of repetition and strength.Always the use of the copula
is. Thus, Mohamed is an imposter,the very phrase canonized in d’Herbelot’s
bibliotheque and dramatized in a sense by Dante”(Said:72). This western
view is fixed in the the European repertoire and collective consciousness.
for example, Humphrey Prideaux who is a famous seventeenth century orientalist
wrote a biography of Mohamed entitled “ the true Nature of Imposter”.
In short, the Islamic religion has come to symbolise the diabolic evil,
the dreaded foe, the insinuating danger, the source of devastation and
demonic terror.
According to Said(1978:59), these misrepresentations are due to the rapid
expansion of Islam in Asia and the enormously increasing triumphs of Islamic
troops “first Persi , Syria and Egypt, then Turkey, then North Africa...in
the eighth and ninth centuries Spain, Sicily and parts of France were
conquered. By the thirteen and fourteen centuries Islam ruled as far East
as India , Indonisia and China”. He proceeds arguing that these distortions
emanates from the fact that Islam represents unresolved challenge on the
political, intellectual and economic levels to
the West. Therefore,transforming the realities of the Orient from what
they are, to what they should be, helps so much in demeaning the importance
of the “outsider enemies”.
In his book Islam and the west: the making of an image, Norman Daniel
explains the reasons underlying these distortions: “Apparently, under
the pressure of their sense of danger, whether real or imagined, a deformed
image of their enemy’s beliefs take shape in men’s minds with the victories
of the Muslims, distortions spread in religious writings and took monstrous
disfigurements in literary imagination.” . On his part, Bekkaoui(1993:2-3)considers
the aim of the distortion and misrepesentation of Islam as an attempt
to “vividly evoke Europeans to engender xenophobia, mount a campaign against
Islam...Norman Daniel goes on to say: the enemies must not be allowed
to speak for themselves. It was the church which arogates to itself the
right to represent the other...the role is to create stereotypes and frame
the Muslims so as to inflame the Crusaders colonizers with holy zeal and
incite them to battle against “the turband Race”it does not matter whether
truth is distorted because Norman Daniel explains the christians thought
that whatever tended to harm the enemies of truth was likely itself to
be true.
3- Orientalism as the site of clash between Zionists and Palestinians:
As an elegant Palestinian professor at Columbia University, Said had
been a faithful advocate of the Arab and Islamic world in general and
a Pro-Palestinian in particular. With all force and passion at his disposal,
he acutely attacked Orientalism as a colonial legacy that has legitimized
Zionism. Indeed, Orientalists have given credence and credibility to the
zionist propaganda “a land without people for people without land” so
as to legitimize their colonial settlement in Palestine.Throughout his
works, Said seized the opportunity to demolish the basis of the Zionist
project.
To begin with, The question of victimization is of significant imporance
for a better understanding of Orientalism. It is deeply rooted in the
Arabo-Zionist conflict.Throughout history, the zionist discourse has been
founded on narrating the the experience of the Jews as victims. The distinctive
features of their representational identity are characterised by diaspora,
sufferings, homelessness, genocide, holocust, persecution, exile and wandering.
Indeed, the Zionists has successfully managed to win supporters to their
liberal project especially in the United States of America. Said was combative
in argumentation; he situated the Palestinian cause at the core of his
preoccupations to the extent that his opponents has tried helplessly to
associate him with Islamic rage and ideologue of terrorism. By way of
illustration, the American zionist Edward Alexander describes Said as
“a professor of terror” that spills ink to justify his Palestinian colleagues’
spilling blood” . What a hellerious ad hominem! What is worse, Said receives
many death threats from other zionists for his strong arguments. His book
refuse to see the Arabs and Muslims as stagnant in their passivity and
backwardness, instead it is an operative manifesto to see them in positive
activism and affirmative action..
The aggressive reactions against E. Said is firmly grounded on of his
being a committed intellectual and a Palestinian exile. As far as being
an intellectual is concerned, Said believes that the Arab intellectual
elites should stick to their political and professional commitments and
remain advocates of their Arab and Islamic issues.As a Palestinian in
exile, Said demonstrates tha the Palestinians are but the last victims
of a long-seated prejudice against the Arabs, Islam and the East in general.
Being aware of the zionists fraudulant logic to gain credibility; Said
ironically applies the same principles of cultural significance to show
that if the Jews presume to be victims throughout history, Palestinians
in turn are the manifestation of the daily Jewish persecution; massacre,
mass-killing and aggression. He strongly provides the image of the Jews
not as the oppressed and prosecuted ,as always been the case, but as the
oppessors and prosecutors. His groundbreaking works are encapsulated with
such literary jargon and titles such as “Zionism from the Standpoint of
its Victims” “My right of Return”, “ An Exile’s Exile”and “Blaming the
Victims”. Such jargon has a powerful influence on the zionist consciousness;
but this time to describe the Palestinian expatriation from their homeland:
“There is a guilty side and there are victims.The Palestinians are the
victims” .
Besides, the Palestinian case is more convincing than the its Zionist
counterpart: “the crucial disparity between the Jewish and Palestinian
experiences is that the former use these terms to denote a collective
nostalgia toward an imaginary and mythical place, while the latter use
the notion to describe the factual loss and concrete historical displacement
of Palestinians from their country. “The difference is that the Jewish
people claim that their relationship to Palestine goes back 3000 years,
and that they were exiled from it and displaced 2.500 years ago.But the
expulsion of the Palestinians from Palestine began just yesterday.Still,
we should not forget that the Zionist official history was founded on
the diaspora and and the idea of permanent exile- this history uses many
myths. I think we as Palestinians should avoid myths,and...focus on the
historical and concrete facts and refuse to utilize mythical dimensions”
4-The foundations of Orientalism:
4-1 Eurodiffusionism:
Eurodiffusionism is one of the theoratical framework that feeds the orientalist
discourse.this notion of Eurodiffusionism is based on the belief that
the whole world has one permanent single center; the Great Europe and
one permanent periphery; the non-European communities. J.Blaut(1993:1)
provides the fundamental tenets of diffusionism “Europeans are seen as
the makers of history. Europe advances, progresses,modernizes. The rest
of the world advances more sluggishly;or stagnates.Therefore the world
has a permanent geographical
center and permanent periphery:an Inside and an Outside.The Inside leads,
the Outside lags.The Inside innovates, the Outside imitates”.Put it differently
, the inside-the Great Europe-is the center of innovations, creation and
civilisation and all diffusions, while the rest of the world are the recipient
of the innovative processes of Europe.The cultural inventions diffuse
or spread from the inside to the outside as the air flows into the vacuum.
Since antiquity,all decisive and most influencial events that changed
the course of human history have taken place in Europe due to “European
Miracle” : “Great Europe has been the perpetual fountainhead of history,
democracy, pure science, mathematics, philosophy, law, modern state and
capitalism”.
In addition, Eurodiffusionism is grounded on “binary division” between
“we”, the Europeans and “they”; the colored people. The former are the
dessendents of the first true man, “Cro-magnon”. they are the source of
racial superiority, cultural priority and historical supermacy. The latter
on the other hand are bogymen living in utter darkness, cruel savagery
and global stagnation: “People living in Africa and Asia are depicted
as inferior, subhuman, barbaric, source of stagnation , political despotism
and, tyranny and cruelty, while only Europeans know the true meaning of
Freedom, honour and courage.” .
What is more ,a dividing line between the inside and the Outside has been
drawn concerning positions, assigning roles to play: the Inside’s-the
center- noble mission and civilizing duty is to progress, modernize, create
and innovate whereas the Outside remains traditional, unchanging, backward
and receptive.Thus, the Inside is historical, outstanding and progressing
while the Outside is ahistorical, irrelevent and non-evolving. In harmony
with divisive classification, “Civilization still marches from Athens
toRome to Paris to London and perhaps set sail to New York...Non-Europeans
do not contribute much to the world history, although they begin to do
so a result of Eurpoean influence, Europeans are still brighter, better
and bolder than everyone else.”
Apart from the European Miracle,Eurodiffusionism relies on the myth of
emptiness.It has a particular connection to settler colonialism in two
ways: first,eliminating native inhabitants by pretending that they are
only wanderers do not settle permanently there. Second, the indigeneous
people are not aware of the meaning of political sovereignety or individual
property and ownership to the land.Thus Europeans have the legitimate
right to colonize these territories. From the angle of Eurodiffusionism,
Colonialism is the inevitable destiny and the natural way for non-European
world to advances out of its stagnation, backwardness and traditionalism.
Moreover, the notion of Eurodiffusionism is reciprocal and bidirectional.Concerning
the reciprocity of their relation, the inside diffuses innovative ideas
and speads new inventions to the outside. The Outside in turn, has a duty
to compensate the Inside for all its noble missions in terms of exploiting
natural resources: “ Compensating in part for the diffusion of civilizing
ideas from Europe to non-Europe, is a counterdiffusion of material wealth
from non-Europe to Europe...nothing can compensate the Europeans for their
gift of civilization to the colonies, so colonialism is morally justified.
It gis more than it receives” .
As for the bidirectional nature between the Inside and the Outside, any
ideas that diffuse from the outside into Europe must be ancient, savage,
atavistic, uncivilized evil, black magic, vampires, plagues, the bogyman
and the like. Associated with this conception is the diffusionist myth
which has been called “the theory of our contemporary ancestors”. It asserts
that as we move farther and farther from civilized Europe, we encounter
people who, successively, reflect earlier and earlier epochs of history
and culture. Thus the so-called “stone-age people.”
Said’s refutes Orientalism because it is based on “the ontological and
epistemological distinction between the Orient and the Occident” that
Eurocentric Diffusionism theory hold as unquestionably valid for every
time and place.In addition, it suppresses the evidence that many communities
and societies -part from Europe- such as China, India and the Islamic
world have contributed positively in the creative innovations of Humanity.
4-2 Colonialism:
The relationship between Orientalism and Colonialism is another divisive
topic among intellectuals. Said’s opponents argue that he falls in a paradoxical
trap.while he is faithful to his dictum “all oriental representations
are misrepresentations”, at the same time he claims that Orientalism paved
the way for imperialism.That is, if all orientalists are spies and intelligence
agents-as Said holds- they are obliged to provide detailed accounts and
authentic information to their governments based on facts and realistic
data instead distortions andmisrepresentations. They also insist that
Said underestimates the role of colonial knowledge about the cultures
of the colonized. Furthermore, many orientalists were motivated by various
commercial, religious and academic motives and not only colonial ones.
In consistency with his thesis, Said provides factual data from history
to reinforce his view that Orientalism exerts an exchange with imperialism.
From the late eighteenth century down on, Orientalism has been an effective
tool and cultural entreprise that facilitate the task for the colonial
powers to rule over the Orient. France and Britain which were the great
imperialist empires at the time set up many institutions concerned with
the study of different geographical areas of the Orient with different
scholarly specializations, before the shift of power moved to the United
States of America after the end of the World War II.
The first manifestation of this exchange was in 1798 when Napoleon’s
invasion of Egypt was facilitated by Orientalism. “Napoleon’s plans for
Egypt therefore became the first in a long series of European encounters
with the orient in which the orientalist special expertise was put directly
to functional colonial use. For at the crucial instant when an orientalist
had to decide whether his loyalties and sympathies lay with the orient
or with the conquering West, he always chose the latter from Napoleon’
s time on...As for the emperor himself(Napoleon), he saw the Orient only
as it had been encoded first by classical texts and then by orientalist
experts, whose vision, based on classical texts, seemed a useful substitute
for any actual encounter with the real Orient”.
Put it differently, the triumph of Napoleon was prepared in advance by
books and scholors. Napoleon and de lesseps admitted that everything they
knew, more or less, about the orient came from books written in the tradition
of Orientalism, placed in its library of “ideés recues”. Orientalism as
system of knowledge provided the political circles with an open easy to
access library or archive of information about the probable impediments
to be encountered by colonial powers and ways to cope with them politically,
socially and economically. The textual production of Orientalism includes
the works of intellectuals such as Gobineau, Renan, Burnouf, Remusat,
Palmer, Zeil, Dozy, Muir, and other literary figures like Goethe, Hugo,
Lamartine, Chateaubriand, Kinglake, Nerval, , Flaubert, Lane, Burton,
Scott, Byron, Vigny, Disraely, G. Eliot, Gautier and many others. Napoleon
for instance did not hide his high admiration for Comte De Volney’s Campagnes
d’Egypte et de Syrie. “Napoleon refers explicitly to Volney reflections
in his Campagnes d’Egypte et de Syrie .Volney considered that there were
three barriers to French hegemony and colonial ambitions in the Orient
and that every any French force would therefore have to fight three wars
: one against England, a second against the Ottman Porte, a third, the
most difficult against the Muslims” .
The idea of taking a full-scale academy of historians, philologists, translators,
travellers archaeologists and physicians, not only indicated the importance
of textual attitude to the orient , but also bolsterd the urgent necessity
for Napoleon to take those skillful orientalists who knew every detail
about it.
Although the Napoleonic invasion of Egypt deeply rooted in the French
imperial scheme to establish an unprecedented empire in the Western history,
Napoleon did not feel shame or embarassment to pretend that the invasion
was for the benefit of Islam: “Napoleon tried everywhere to prove that
he was fighting for Islam; everything he said was translated into Koranic
Arabic...he make the local imams, cadis, muftis,and ulemas interpret the
Koran in favor of the Grande Armée. To this end, the sixty ulemas who
taught at the Azhar were invited to his quarters, given full military
honors, and allowed to be flattered by Napoleon’s admiration for Islam
and Mohammed and by his obvious veneration for the Koran, with which he
seemed perfectly familiar... He made every efforts to convince the Egyptians
that “ nous sommes les vrais musulmans” .
In brief, many Orientalists have examplified the duality of their existence
as both political experts and academic scholars. Sir William Jones, Macdonald,
Balfour, Cromer, Massingon, Bernard Louis are but few names in the long
list of imperial agents disguised in academically scholastic pursuit.
In close relation with colonialism, Said considers Anti-Humanism and racism
as key features of the orientalist discourse. what follows, will clarify
each one of them.
4-3 Anti-Humanism:
Enlightenment was the historical period that witnessed the reemergence
of a Eurocentric imperialism that was founded on the “Truth” of being.
Said contends that humanist culture is tightly linked to colonial imperialism.
Humanism means the European Man’s constant search for certitude and mastery
over the prolific earth. For Said, Humanism is an other configuration
of Western hegemony to dominate and rule over the Orient. In Being and
Time, Heideggar claims that “Humanitas” can be traced back to the age
of the Roman Republic.The Romans divided the world into two polarized
spheres: Homo Humanitas and Homo Barbarus.While Homo Humanitas means the
Romans who exalted and honored Roman virtues through the embodiment of
the Paidea(education; culture and erudition) , Homo Barbarus denotes the
savage world of non-Romans. In addition, the Romans were qualified as
Veritas metropolis as opposed to the Falsum world. Therefore, the Roman
educational project is devoted to “ eruditio et institution Homo Barbarus
in bonas artes”; scholarship and training of the Barbarians in good conduct.
An other pretext that legitimated the Roman will to power over the “barbarians”
so as to produce royal citizens of the Metropolis.
Rome has been always the model and the norm; it constituted not only the
mode of reference of modern Humanism, but also the definitive model for
modern imperialism. In other words, Rome becomes the founding moment of
European history, the source and the end of Occidental representation
of being and identity. In fact, the so-called Renaissance in Italy is
a renascentia romanitatis; the revival and the rebirth of the Roman values
and civilisation. Orientalism subsequently emanates from the same source
and constitutes the ideological doctrine and political embodiment underlying
the tendency to imperialism.
According to Said, Orientalism has always possessed the same essence throughout
history from the classical Greece to modern American Middle Eastern Studies.
Even the existential philosopher J.P. Sartre clarifies the deep nature
of Humanism: “ First,we must face the striptease of our humanism.There
you can see it ,quite naked and it is not a pretty sight. It was nothing
but an ideology of lies, a perfect justification for pillage, its honeyed
words, its affectation of sensibility were only alibies for our aggressions”
2-4 Racism:
Along with anti-Humanism, Racism is the ideology which justifies the
colonial rule and imperialist exploitation. the French orientalist Earnest
Renan for instance, believes that the “Semites[ the Arabs and the Jews]
are rabid monotheists who produced no mythology, no art, no commerce,
no civilization;their consciousness is a narrow one. All in all, they
represent “une combinaison inferieure de la nature humane...the Semitic
race appears to us to be an incomplete race, by virtue of its simplicity,
this race this race is...like that pencil sketch is painting, it lacks
that variety, that amplitude...the Semitic nations experienced their fullest
flowering intheir first age and have never been able to acheive true maturity”.
An other racist figure Jules Harmond, who is qualified as the spokesman
of the French imperialism, reinforces the same illusions of Western superiority
:“I is necessary then, to accept as a principle trhat there is a hierarchy
of races and civilisations and “we” belong to the superior race and civilisation.
The basic legitimation of conquest over native people, is the conviction
of our superiority.Our dignity rests on that quality,and it underlies
our right to direct the rest of humanity” .
Furthermore, Chateaubriant derives his derogatory lexicography from the
same orientalist archive. He claims that “ of liberty, the Orientals know
nothing, of property, they have none. Force is their God...they have the
body of soldiers without a leader, citizens without legislators, and family
without a father”.This racist trend reached its culmination in Gobineau’s
book “the Inequality of Human Races” published in 1853. This book was
one of the most aspiring gospels of Hitler to attain his imperialist ends.
For Gobineau, only Europeans are the the source of brilliance,intelligence
and vigor, nobility of mind, civility of character and ingenuity of morals
.
Conclusion:
The polemical debates swirling around Said’Orientalism reflect the significant
role and far-reaching impact the book has exerted on Academia. While Said’s
critics enthusiastically praise the acheivements and contributions of
Orientalism, accusing Said of sweeping overgeneralizations and undermining
the diversity and heterogeneous nature of orientalist heritage, Said in
his turn based his strong rejection of Orientalism on historical intellectual
and academic grounds. He manages successfully to deconstruct the fundamental
tenets of the orientalist discourse. His furious attack emanates from
his conviction that Orientalism is not only a configuration of Western
Hegemony, but also is closely tied with imperialism, racism, anti-Humanism
and Euro-Diffusionism. In addition, Orientalists have never extended beyond
the strictures and the confines imposed by the Western culture to which
they all belong.
Said’s thesis has two dimensions: first, it presses on the urgent need
to look for other alternatives that can grant real and authentic representations
of other cultures and societies rather than Orientalism. Second, it calls
for the adoption of more humane and humanistic paradigms beyond prejudices,
distortions and feelings of hostility that Orientalist writings tend to
feed and expound.
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