Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of maps
- Acknowledgments
- 1 The rise of Islam and the Arab conquests
- 2 The Ottoman empire to 1566
- 3 The Middle East and North Africa on the eve of the First World War
- 4 The Middle East and North Africa between the Two World Wars
- 5 The Middle East and North Africa – boundaries
- 6 The Middle East and North Africa in the world
- Introduction
- 1 In the beginning
- 2 Islam, the West and the rest
- 3 Orientalism and empire
- 4 The American century
- 5 Turmoil in the field
- 6 Said's Orientalism: a book and its aftermath
- 7 After Orientalism?
- Afterword
- Notes
- Bibliography
- Index
3 - Orientalism and empire
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 15 December 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of maps
- Acknowledgments
- 1 The rise of Islam and the Arab conquests
- 2 The Ottoman empire to 1566
- 3 The Middle East and North Africa on the eve of the First World War
- 4 The Middle East and North Africa between the Two World Wars
- 5 The Middle East and North Africa – boundaries
- 6 The Middle East and North Africa in the world
- Introduction
- 1 In the beginning
- 2 Islam, the West and the rest
- 3 Orientalism and empire
- 4 The American century
- 5 Turmoil in the field
- 6 Said's Orientalism: a book and its aftermath
- 7 After Orientalism?
- Afterword
- Notes
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
Over the course of the nineteenth century, Europeans and Americans would increasingly come to see the Orient as divided into two distinct units: a “Near East” comprising southeastern Europe, the Levant (as I mentioned in Chapter 2, the lands along the eastern shores of the Mediterranean and their hinterlands) and other parts of western Asia nearer to Europe, and a “Far East” encompassing India, southeast Asia, China and Japan. By the latter part of the nineteenth century, the term “Oriental” had in popular usage in the United States come to refer largely to people from East Asia, especially the Chinese whose arrival as immigrants was often met by considerable hostility.
Nonetheless, the Orient remained a powerful category in nineteenth century European popular and scholarly culture. It was in this period that the term Orientalism actually entered French, English and other European languages as (among other things) the special name for the scholarly field which focused on the Orient, including the predominantly Muslim lands of Asia, reflecting the dramatic expansion and institutionalization of scholarship in the field over the course of the nineteenth century. Over the previous century or two the study in Europe of the languages, histories, religions and cultures of the Orient had been sustained by a scattered handful of scholars. But a revival took place in the nineteenth century which would for a time feed into what a French scholar called “the Oriental renaissance,” with a powerful impact on several arenas of European thought and culture.
However, the nineteenth century also witnessed a new stage in the lengthy and uneven process of extending European hegemony over most of the planet that had begun three centuries earlier.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Contending Visions of the Middle EastThe History and Politics of Orientalism, pp. 66 - 98Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2004