Orientalism and literature / edited by Geoffrey P. Nash.

Format
Book
Language
English
Published/​Created
  • Cambridge, United Kingdom ; New York, NY : Cambridge University Press, 2019.
  • ©2019
Description
xiv, 374 pages ; 24 cm.

Availability

Available Online

Copies in the Library

Location Call Number Status Location Service Notes
Firestone Library - Stacks PN56.3.O74 O746 2019 Browse related items Request

    Details

    Subject(s)
    Editor
    Series
    Cambridge critical concepts [More in this series]
    Summary note
    "Introduction What is the relationship between Orientalism and literature and how does it aid us in our reading? Orientalism: Critical Concepts sets out to interrogate a key critical concept in literary studies, and has the aim of reviewing the evolution of the concept as it has been explored, imagined and narrated in literature. Building upon existing scholarship the aim is to give readers a comprehensive grasp of the origins and present contours of Orientalism, and to point out future directions in this field. In the early eighteenth century the term designated scholarship on the East, as well as a style in the arts. Interest in the study of oriental languages led to the establishment of Orientalism as a profession. Although it continued as a discipline for well over two centuries, its scope developed beyond its philological beginnings and its vaguely defined existence as a literary or artistic topic or style. Then, in the 1960s and 70s, the academic credibility of Orientalism as an institutionalized discipline began to be contested, and after Edward Said's epoch-making volume, Orientalism: Western Perceptions of the Orient (1978), the term underwent wholesale re-evaluation. From a literary studies perspective the value of Said's work is that it probes foundations of the relationship between the West and its other in the context of the creation of the modern world, as seen through the lens of culture and literature. Said focused on Orientalism in Britain and France, and in the United States from the second half of the twentieth century"-- Provided by publisher.
    Bibliographic references
    Includes bibliographical references (pages 353-363) and index.
    Contents
    • Styles of orientalism in the eighteenth century / Suvir Kaul
    • The origin and development of the oriental tale / James Watt
    • Romantic orientalism and occidentalism / Saree Makdisi
    • The Victorians : empire and the east / Sukanya Banerjee
    • Orientalism and Victorian fiction / Daniel Bivona
    • Orientalism and race : Aryans and Semites / Christopher Hutton
    • Orientalism and the Bible / Ivan D. Kalmar
    • Said, Bhabha and the colonized subject / Eleanor Byrne
    • The Harem : gendering orientalism / Reina Lewis
    • Orientalism and Middle East travel writing / Ali Behdad
    • Nineteenth- and twentieth-century American orientalism / David Weir
    • Edward Said and resistance in colonial and postcolonial literatures / Valerie Kennedy
    • Can the cosmopolitan writer be absolved of racism? / Andrew C. Long
    • From orientalism to Islamophobia / Mahmut Mutman
    • Applications of neo-orientalism and Islamophobia in recent writing / Peter Morey
    • Orientalism and cultural translation : Middle Eastern American writing / Carol W.N. Fadda
    • New orientalism and the American media : New York Cleopatra and Saudi "giggly black ghosts" / Moneera Ghadeer
    • On orientalism's future(s) / Anouar Majid
    • The engine of survival : a future for orientalism / Patrick Williams.
    ISBN
    • 9781108499002 ((hardback ; : alk. paper))
    • 1108499007 ((hardback ; : alk. paper))
    LCCN
    2019004122
    OCLC
    1090282248
    Statement on language in description
    Princeton University Library aims to describe library materials in a manner that is respectful to the individuals and communities who create, use, and are represented in the collections we manage. Read more...
    Other views
    Staff view

    Supplementary Information