Title: Postcolonialism
1Postcolonialism
- Orientalism and the other
2Edward Said
- The Palestinian-American Scholar Edward Said
(1935-2003) is one of the most important
contributors to postcolonialist thought and
theory. His book Orientalism (Said, 1978) is a
certainly a key text. He argues that the
Western colonisers of the Orient (the East) had
little interested in exploring or understanding
the cultures they encountered. Instead, they were
more interested in reinforcing a set of misguided
assumptions that said more about the west than
the east.
3Saids view of the colonisers
- ... they recorded their observations based upon
commonly-held assumptions about the Orient as a
mythic place of exoticism, moral laxity, sexual
degeneracy and so forth. These observations
(which were really not observations at all) were
presented as scientific truths that in their turn
functioned to justify the very propriety of
colonial domination.
4Odalisque with a Slave, Jean-Auguste Dominique
Ingres, oil on canvas, 1839-1840
5The Snake Charmer Jean Paul Gerome
6French harem fantasy with a black eunuch servant.
The link between popularized orientalism and
libidinization is obvious. "Les petits voyages de
Paris-Plaisirs."--Paris Plaisir, Feb. 1930
7The Other
- The Orient, then, became an idea that benefitted
the West by holding up a mirror-image of dominant
western values and beliefs. It stood for all that
was regarded as alien and inferior the Wests
other. Crucially, the economic and military
power of the imperialists was matched by their
cultural power they were able to convert this
set of commonly-held assumptions, beneficial to
themselves, into the truth through their
enormous capacity to produce and circulate
representations.
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9The Oriental
- The Oriental is the person represented by such
thinking. The man is depicted as feminine, weak,
yet strangely dangerous because 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.
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11Not the other ..
12Othering
- Examples of othering are still very prevalent
in contemporary culture. For example, advertisers
may offer consumers a taste of the East or the
mysteries of the Orient whilst film producers
scour the globe for locations (and attendant
extras) to serve as a tastefully exotic
background to the latest action adventure film.
Similarly, architects and designers may
incorporate hints of mystery, difference or
otherness in their work by utilising symbols
such as a palm tree or a pagoda shape.
13Exotic Holidays