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May 08, 2008

debating orientalism

Orientalism

So many academics want the arguments presented in Edward Said’s Orientalism (1978) to be true. It encourages the reading of novels at an oblique angle in order to discover hidden colonialist subtexts. It promotes a hypercritical version of British and, more generally, of Western achievements. It discourages any kind of critical approach to Islam in Middle Eastern studies. Above all, Orientalism licenses those academics who are so minded to think of their research and teaching as political activities. The drudgery of teaching is thus transformed into something much more exciting, namely “speaking truth to power”.

It is unlikely that the two books under review, both of which present damning criticisms of Said’s book at length and in detail, will change anything. Daniel Martin Varisco is a professor of anthropology who has specialized in Yemeni agriculture. It is perhaps because of this that he takes exception to Said’s “textualism” and his consequent neglect of anthropology, sociology and psychology. Varisco has a multitude of other charges to bring against Orientalism and he is able to draw on an astonishingly long list of witnesses for the prosecution, including Sadiq Jalal al-’Azm, Bryan Turner, Malcolm Kerr, Ziauddin Sardar, Bernard Lewis, Nadim al-Bitar, Victor Brombert, Ernest Gellner, Jane Miller, John Sweetman, John Mackenzie and many others.

more from the TLS here.

Posted by Morgan Meis at 08:56 AM | Permalink

Comments

The books under review, and the review itself, seems to be more of an attack of Said's admirers and/or Said himself than the ideas in his books.

The second book is a quasi-polemical commentary by none other than Ibn Warraq. Luckily it didn't make the 3QD blurb, even as one of Varisco's witnesses to the prosecution.

Robert Irwin, the author of the article, points out Varisco's analysis of Said's rhetorical "tricksiness" as an accomplishment. Note well that Said did things like *qualify* his bold assertions, and avoiding measureable statistics where he meant more than he said, thereby tricking the lambs who followed him.

What about the first line of the review: "So many academics want the arguments presented in Edward Said’s Orientalism (1978) to be true." That seems fairly pregnant with a half-assed conclusion. Is is me or has some international thought police committee ordained that Orientalism has been debunked? More to the point, how long has Irwin been beating his wife :) ?

Posted by: sifta | May 9, 2008 2:22:58 PM

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