Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Acknowledgements
- Notes on the Contributors
- Abbreviations
- List of Illustrations
- I INTRODUCTION
- II ARABISM
- 3 The Estranged Self of Spain: Oriental Obsessions in the Time of Gayangos
- 4 Scholarship and Criticism: The Letters of Reinhart Dozy to Pascual de Gayangos (1841–1852)
- III GAYANGOS IN THE ENGLISH-SPEAKING WORLD
- IV GAYANGOS AND MATERIAL CULTURE
- Bibliography
- Index
3 - The Estranged Self of Spain: Oriental Obsessions in the Time of Gayangos
from II - ARABISM
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 12 September 2012
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Acknowledgements
- Notes on the Contributors
- Abbreviations
- List of Illustrations
- I INTRODUCTION
- II ARABISM
- 3 The Estranged Self of Spain: Oriental Obsessions in the Time of Gayangos
- 4 Scholarship and Criticism: The Letters of Reinhart Dozy to Pascual de Gayangos (1841–1852)
- III GAYANGOS IN THE ENGLISH-SPEAKING WORLD
- IV GAYANGOS AND MATERIAL CULTURE
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
When we bear in mind nineteenth-century considerations of Islamic Iberia within Spain, which was so much under the sway of liberal nationalism, we may be inclined to fall back on three touchstones of much modern academic analysis: that nationalities were understood in an essentialist manner; that the ‘oriental’ was rendered exotic in order ultimately to be subjected, and that orientalist description and mapping – literal and metaphorical – was an instrument of colonisation. Some scholarship of the past decade on orientalism in the west – for example that of Mackenzie – has, of course, queried some such assumptions, deriving from Said among others – not least, any straightforward assertion that the effect or intention of describing the oriental as ‘other’ was always to subject and colonise, or that the west itself maintained over a long period of history a consistent view or discourse of the orient. As Mackenzie and Macfie both indicate in their criticism of ‘occidentalism’, the specific, contingent historical and political context of European discussion of the orient should take precedent over suppositions that there was an underlying and continuous ‘discourse’ of orientalism. Equally, some scholars working on English and Scottish culture, such as Craig and Chandler, have questioned whether understandings of national historicism were always fundamentally essentialist and ahistorical. At the same time, some academics, such as Reina Lewis, have shown how accounts of the relationship between ‘west’ and ‘east’ could be significantly shaped by concerns other than those of religion or nationality, for instance gender or class.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Pascual de GayangosA Nineteenth-Century Spanish Arabist, pp. 49 - 67Publisher: Edinburgh University PressPrint publication year: 2008