STUDENTS, TEACHERS, AND EDWARD SAID: TAKING
STOCK OF ORIENTALISM
By Joshua Teitelbaum and Meir Litvak,* translated from Hebrew by Keren Ribo
Since the publication of Orientalism in 1978, Edward Said's critique has become the hegemonic
discourse of Middle Eastern studies in the academy. While Middle Eastern studies can
improve, and some part of Said's criticism is valid, it is apparent that the Orientalism critique
has done more harm than good. Although Said accuses the West and Western researchers of
"essentializing" Islam, he himself commits a similar sin when he writes that Western
researchers and the West are monolithic and unchanging. Such a view delegitimizes any search
for knowledge--the very foundation of the academy. One of Said 's greatest Arab critics, Syrian
philosopher Sadiq Jalal al-Azm, attacked Said for the anti-intellectualism of this view. Since
German and Hungarian researchers are not connected to imperialism, Said conveniently
leaves them out of his critique. Said also ignores the positive contribution that researchers
associated with power made to the understanding of the Middle East. Said makes an egregious
error by negating any Islamic influence on the history of the region. His discursive blinders-for he has created his own discourse--led him before September 11, 2001 to denigrate the idea
that Islamist terrorists could blow up buildings and sabotage airplanes. Finally, Said's
influence has been destructive: it has contributed greatly to the excessively politicized
atmosphere in Middle Eastern studies that rejects a critical self-examination of the field, as
well as of Middle Eastern society and politics.
The study of the Middle East, or
"Oriental studies," as this discipline was
once referred to in the past, has faced
increasing criticism since the 1960s by
scholars both in the region and from the
West. Indeed, in any comparison of the
accomplishments of Middle Eastern studies
with developments in the writing of
European and American history, the former
is found wanting, particularly in the area of
methodology and in the subjects studied.1
There are several reasons for Middle
Eastern studies' relative stagnation; some
have to do with the nature of historical
sources in the Middle East, and others have
to do with the development of the
discipline, which had its beginnings in the
philological tradition as a branch of
learning that was not integrated in the wider
discipline of history.
Leading the charge of critics ha ve been
Edward Said's writings, and above all
Orientalism (1978). 2 Indeed, academic
scholarship on the Middle East has been
profoundly altered by this book. Its success
was a combination of several processes,
including a great enthusiasm for the Third
World in the American academy, increased
criticism of America's policies following
the Vietnam War, 3 and generational as well
as ethnic changes in the research
community--expressed mostly by the
entrance of many new researchers of
Middle Eastern origin to Western and
especially U.S. institutions. Edward Said
expressed the bitterness of academics
Middle East Review of International Affairs, Vol. 10, No. 1 (March 2006)
23
Joshua Teitelbaum and Meir Litvak
toward previous research approaches and
the United States itself.
According to Martin Kramer, the
Orientalism critique gave these researchers
an apparent advantage over their Western
colleagues, since they were, presumably,
free from the limited Western ethnocentric
perspective and could interpret and examine
it in a more reliable way. This orientation
was reinforced by the collapse of the
modernization theory, which was perceived
rightly as a reflection of an empirically
flawed Western ethnocentric perception,
and the rise of other theories in the field of
social sciences, such as the dependency
theory, which blamed most Third World
problems
on
Western
imperialism.
Moreover, the development of historical
and social science res earch proved that the
traditional, philological method had been
found wanting, and, at times, even
misleading. 4
The purpose of this article is to analyze
and put in perspective some of the
debates which resulted from Said's book
and its hegemony in the American
academy, as well as to point out some of
the negative results which arose from this
criticism.
Said 's starting point is that the existence
and development of every culture compels
the existence of a different and necessarily
competitive "other" or "alter ego."
Therefore, as part of a process of
constructing its self-image, Europe created
the Middle East (the "Orient") as the
ultimate "other," as a counter-image in all
possible aspects. The Middle East (the
"Orient ") and the West (the "Occident")
"correspond to no stable reality that exists
as a natural fact," but are merely products
of construction. Still, "[t]he relationship
between Occident and Orient is a
relationship of power, of domination, of
24
hegemony. "5 "Orientalism" --once a school
of art but since turned Said's neologism for
this unique combination of knowledge and
power--is simultaneously the source of
perception and its product, since it is
strongly related to European identity as
superior to all non-European peoples and
cultures, and to the oppression of the
Middle East by the Europeans.
Said defines Orientalism in several
ways: First, "Orientalism is a style of
thought based upon an ontological and
epistemological distinction made between
the 'Orient' and (most of the time) the
'Occident.'" This distinction, which Said
argues can be traced from the days of
Homer and Aeschylus in ancient Greece
and up to the present, emphasizes the
supremacy of the West versus the
inferiority of the East. Second, it is a field
of academic research that includes everyone
who writes and teaches about the Orient.
Third, Orientalism is a "corporate
institution for dealing with the Orient"
beginning in the eighteenth century. In
short, Orientalism is seen "as a Western
style for dominating, restructuring, and
having authority over the Orient. " 6
According to this perception, the Middle
East is static, unchangeable, and cannot
define itself. The West, therefore, through
Orientalism, took it upon itself to represent
the Orient and by that means to open it to
exploitation. The very essence of
Orientalism is to take control of the Orient
and take away from it any ability to speak
for itself. European science first started to
"represent " when it began to "classify, to
type the world and its inhabitants into the
stronger and the weaker, backward and
advanced, superior and inferior types. " Said
maintains, therefore, that it is the idées
reçues and prejudices that determine the
representation. Hence the knowledge
Middle East Review of International Affairs, Vol. 10, No. 1 (March 2006)
Students, Teachers, and Edward Said: Taking Stock of Orientalism
created by the representation is "never raw,
unmediated, or simply objective. "7
Said describes Orientalism as a
discourse, a definition he takes from the
French
philosopher-historian
Michel
Foucault.
According
to
Foucault's
definition, discourse is a system of thought
that governs the knowledge one may obtain.
This knowledge, which is inspired and
oriented by the discourse, is a paraphrase of
ideas and preconceived notions.8 A
discourse is the result of interaction
between knowledge and power, which are
connected to each other in a never-ending
circle. Foucault thinks that knowledge is
power and that it is the way of gaining
power:
No body of knowledge can be
formed without a system of
communications,
record,
accumulation and displacement,
which it itself is a form of power
and which is linked, in its existence
and functioning, to the other forms
of power. Conversely, no power can
be exercised without the extraction,
appropriatio n,
distribution
or
retention of knowledge. On this
level, there is not knowledge on one
side and society on the other, or
science and the state, but only the
fundamental
forms
of
knowledge/power.9
Scholarly exercises in analysis and
research, purported to be objective, are
"founded in and aid in the maintenance of a
certain system of dominative social
relations and political practices."10 In the
words of Foucault, "one is only in the truth
by obeying the rules of a 'discursive police'
that must be reactivated in each one of
these discourses. The discipline is a
principle of control and the production of
discourse. It establishes the limits of
discourse by the play of an identity which
takes the form of a permanent
reactualization of rules."11 Said argue s that
without "examining Orientalism as a
discourse, one cannot possibly understand
the enormously systematic discipline by
which European culture was able to
manage--and even produce--the Orient,
politically,
sociologically,
militarily,
ideologically,
scientifically
and
imaginatively
during
the
postEnlightenment period." He continues:
"Moreover, so authoritative a position did
Orientalism have that…no one writing,
thinking, or acting on the Orient could do
so without taking account of the limitations
on thought and action imposed by
Orientalism."12
Said, like Foucault, denies the concept
of knowledge and scholarship for its own
sake; according to his method, knowledge
is always connected to political,
sociological, economic and other power
systems. It is formed by interactions with
political power (such as colonial or imperial
institutions), intellectual power (such the
dominant sciences, and among them
comparative philology), and with cultural
power.13
With these ideas as the foundation of his
thought, knowledge ("Orientalism") and
power (imperialism) are presented as two
central themes in all of Said 's books and
articles on the Middle East and on Middle
Eastern studies. The first is the European
interest in Islam, which result ed not from
curiosity but rather from the fear of a
powerful monotheistic competitor in the
cultural
and
military
field.
This
combination of fear and animosity lasts
until today: Said argues that he had "not
been able to discover any period in
Middle East Review of International Affairs, Vol. 10, No. 1 (March 2006)
25
Joshua Teitelbaum and Meir Litvak
European or American history sin ce the
Middle Ages in which Islam was generally
discussed or thought about outside a
framework created by passion, prejudice
and political interests. "14
The second theme is the relationship
between the "Orientalists" and the systems
of power and control. According to Said,
the self- image of the Orientalists as
researchers seeking scientific truth was a
subterfuge, obscuring a seedy story of
collusion with power and accepting the idea
of Western supremacy. By "representing"
the Orient as static and degenerate -according to Said, Orientalists never
analyze, describe or depict, they only
"represent "--Orientalism
presents
the
justification for Western imperialism to
dominate the Orient. Moreover, Orientalism
produces and carries out services for
imperialism in various ways such as
scientific
discovery,
philological
restoration,
psychological
analysis,
landscape description, and sociological
description. None of the Orientalists, even
the most skillful ones, can escape the
corruptive effect of power on knowle dge.
For instance in the United States, "political
imperialism governs an entire field of
study,
imagination
and
scholarly
institutions." He adds further that "[m]uch
of the information and knowledge about
Islam…that was used by the colonial
powers…derived
from
Orientalist
scholarship, " and that "many Islamic
specialists were and still are routinely
consulted by, and actively work for,
governments whose designs in the Islamic
world
are
economic
exploitation,
domination, or outright aggression…."15
Loyal to t he concept of discourse, Said does
not distinguish between the study of the
Middle East as a research discipline (what
he terms "Orientalism, " or what was once
26
commonly known as Oriental studies) and
depicting the Middle East (which he terms
the Orient) in popular literature or in art. On
the contrary, Said gives academic research
a crucial role in distributing the Orientalist
paradigms and claims that Orientalist
research gave validity and inspiration to the
popular cultural Orientalism of poets,
authors, travelers, and painters. 16
Following the concept of the tight
connection between Orientalism and
imperialism, Said focuses on Britain,
France, and the United States, as "Britain
and France dominated the Eastern
Mediterranean from the end of the
seventeenth century, " and the United States
inherited the role of the imperial hegemon
since World War Two. He explains that he
will not refer to "the important
contributions of Germany, Italy, Russia,
Spain and Portugal," because they were
influenced mostly by what was happening
in Britain and France. 17 While doing so,
Said accuses the practitioners of traditional
Middle Eastern studies, and even the most
outstanding among them, of basic hostility
toward Islam. Never, he determines, has
any Orientalist identified with the Arabs
culturally or politically . Having placed
Orientalism's power as an essential part of
Western
culture,
Said
sweep ingly
determines that "every European, in what
he could say about the Orient, was…a
racist, an imperialist, and almost totally
ethnocentric. " 18
THE DEBATE OVER ORIENTALISM
During the 1980s, Said 's Orientalism
critique became a nearly sacred doctrine in
the American academy. Even so, the book
engendered not a few criticisms which
focused on three main issues: the validity of
the main arguments raised by Said,
primarily those related to the nature of
Middle East Review of International Affairs, Vol. 10, No. 1 (March 2006)
Students, Teachers, and Edward Said: Taking Stock of Orientalism
Middle East studies as a research field;
methodological problems; and the negative
consequences of his arguments. It should be
mentioned that among the critics were not
only those his book attacked but also
scholars praised by him, such as Maxime
Rodinson and Albert Hourani, or
researchers who presented different
political opinions, among them even Arab
intellectuals. This makes it harder to claim
that the motive for criticism was merely of
a personal or national sort.
The critics did not deny that Western
culture and scholarship in the past has
included ethnocentric, racist, or anti-Islamic
components, but argued that these had been
greatly exaggerated, to the point of being
made universal. Out of more than 60,000
works on the Middle East published in
Europe and the United States, he chose only
those needed in order to prove his case that
there was a discourse which he termed
Orientalism. In order to arrive at this
conclusion he ignored much evidence
critical to the historical documentation of
research and literature, material which
would have supported the opposite
position. 19 His choices, as Kramer writes,
rejected "all discrimination between genres
and disregarded all extant hierarchies of
knowledge." This was particularly true
regarding Said's deliberate conflation of
Middle Eastern studies as a research
discipline and the popular, artistic, or
literary perspective of the Orient. It also
disregarded the key question of which were
the field 's main texts and which were those
purely on the margins. 20
This approach led Said to ignore several
leading researchers who had a decisive
influence on Middle Eastern studies. For
example, there is his almost complete
ignoring of Ignaz Gold ziher's work--which
made an undeniable contribution to the
study of Islam--since his persona
contradicts Said's claims. Said chose to
attack
Goldziher's
criticism
of
anthropomorphism in the Koran as
supposed proof of his negative attitude
toward Islam, while Goldziher himself felt
great respect for Islam and had even
attacked Ernest Renan for his racist
conceptions.21 Malcolm Kerr, for example,
criticized Said's ignorance of the role and
importance of Arab-American Middle East
researchers, who played an important role
in the field and could not easily be labeled
anti-Arab or anti- Islamic. Reina Lewis and
Joan Miller argued that Said ignored
women's voices which, they maintained,
contradicted the monolithically masculine
representation which Said wished to
present. 22 Said's selectivity enabled him to
paint scholarship of the Middle East as an
essentialist, racist, and unchangeable
phenomenon, whereas the evidence he
ignored would have proven that the
Western understanding and representation
of the Middle East--especially of the Arabs
and Islam--had become quite rich and
multi- faceted over the years.
Many scholars and literary figures were
actually enamored with the residents of the
Middle East, and the "Orientalist discourse "
was not nearly as dominant as Said would
have his readers believe, as few examples
among many would show. British literary
figures and activists, like Wilfred Scawen
Blunt, actively sought to improve the lot of
the Arabs. Traveler and M.P. David
Urquhart promoted Ottoman Turkey as a
partner for Christian Europe. Marmaduke
Pickthall, a famous convert to Islam and a
translator of the Koran, looked to Turkey
for the formation of a modernist Islam.
Finally, Cambridge Persian scholar E.G.
Browne wrote in favor of the Iranian
revolution of 1906-1911 and published
Middle East Review of International Affairs, Vol. 10, No. 1 (March 2006)
27
Joshua Teitelbaum and Meir Litvak
articles against Curzon. These examples
demonstrate the existence of discourses on
the Middle East other than that
characterized by Said. 23 Moreover, a
number of researchers have demonstrated
that though Islam was perceived as
Europe's enemy in the Middle Ages, even
then it had already gained respect and
appreciation in the fields of science and
philosophy, to the point of even idealizing
it as a philosopher's religion. 24
A prominent example of the complexity
of the Western perspective on Islam is the
attitude of the Enlightenment movement in
the eighteenth century, which Said
perceives as the parent of modern
Orientalism. True, some attacked Islam as a
part of their rational, secular perception
which criticized unenlightened religiosity-parallel arguments were simultaneously
made by them against Christianity and
Judaism. Moreover, at times it was clear
that their criticism of Islam was actually a
camouflaged criticism of Christianity. Yet,
other contemporary writers viewed Islam as
a rational religion closer to the ideas of the
Enlightenment than Christianity. They saw
it as a religion balanced between a
commitment
to
morality
and
an
acknowledgement of the basic needs of
man, as opposed to Christianity's distorted
attitude toward sex. There were among
them, too, people who spoke admiringly of
Islam and its tolerance of minorities, and
juxtaposed it with Christian fanaticism.
An important factor in shaping the
complex perspective of Oriental studies in
the nineteenth century was the entry of
Jewish researchers into the field. They
brought a deep knowledge of Judaism to a
comparative study of Islam. Unlike some
Christian researchers of Islam, they had no
missionary approach or nostalgia for the
Crusades or much interest in the political
28
aspects of the contemporary "Eastern
Question." For these Jewish scholars, Islam
did not represent the same kind of religious
challenge to Judaism that it did to
Christianity, and therefore they were free of
most of the prejudices that tripped up many
Christian scholars. On the contrary, many
Jewish researchers evolved an almost
romantic approach toward Islam. They
emphasized its tolerant attitude toward the
Jews, as opposed to Medieval Europe and
the rising anti- Semitism of the nineteenth
century. Some of them tended to portray
Jewish history in Muslim lands as a
continuous golden age.25 They stood
somewhere between the two worlds, as
Jews with histories both Middle Eastern
and European, contrary to Said's portrayal
of unflagging European ethnocentrism. It
was thus convenient for Said to leave them
out of his one-dimensional portrayal of the
Orientalist discourse. Middle Eastern Jews
present a problem for the Saidian OrientOccident dichotomy. He deals with this by
pointedly connecting "Oriental Jews" with
Palestinians when writing of Israeli (i.e.,
Western) discrimination. That the Jewish
concept of peoplehood spans the West and
the East is perhaps too threatening to the
dichotomy so central to his theory. 26
The argument that the Occident (or
actually Europe prior to the twentieth
century) primarily defined itself in
opposition to the Orient may be questioned
as over-simplifying and essentialist.
According
to
Keith
Windschuttle,
Europeans identify themselves as joint heirs
of classical Greece and Christianity, each
tempered by the fluxes of medieval
scholasticism,
the
Renaissance,
the
Reformation and Counter-Reformation, the
Enlightenment, and modernism. In other
words, Western identity is overwhelmingly
defined by historical references to its earlier
Middle East Review of International Affairs, Vol. 10, No. 1 (March 2006)
Students, Teachers, and Edward Said: Taking Stock of Orientalism
selves rather than by geographical
comparisons with others. To claim
otherwise is to deny the central thrust of
Western education for the past one
thousand years. 27
Conversely, the argument that Islam was
the ultimate "other" in Western culture,
may be challenged as well. Christian
theology and doctrine emerged to a large
degree as an antithesis to Judaism.
Likewise, in popular culture the image of
the Jew was much more frightening than
that of the Muslim. It can be argued that the
number of explicit anti-Jewish tracts-theological or political--throughout western
history was probably higher than those
devoted to Islam. The point here is not
made to win the race of victimhood, but
rather to argue that the picture of defining
the "self" and the "other" in European
culture was much more complex than the
one Said presented; the "Orient" was not
necessarily the defining "other" of the
Occidental self.
In the final analysis, then, contrary to
what Said would have his readers believe,
his idea of "Orientalism" is exaggerated and
fails to encompass the entirety of how the
West understood and conceived Islam; just
as it cannot be said that because of antiSemitism, all of European thought was
hostile toward Jews, is it not true that the
West viewed the Middle East in a closed
circle of interpretation disconnected from
other historical developments. New ideas
that surfaced in intercultural contact
undermined a priori assumptions time after
time. Prejudices and stereotypes were
endemic but never shaped into an
unchangeable united discourse on the
Middle East. In reality, academics who led
the discourse often took the lead in
undermining prejudices. Said, concluded
Bayly Winder, did to Western scholars of
Islam exactly what he accused them of
doing to the Middle East. 28
Said's disregard of the scope and
complexity of research on Islam and the
Middle East motivated Rodinson to
comment that Said was not familiar enough
with the main body of scholarly research on
the Middle East. 29 However, Said's
disregarding of this scholarship does not
appear to result from a lack of familiarity,
but rather from a political agenda, and the
proof of this is that he continued to make
his arguments regarding the monolithic
character of Middle Eastern studies years
after publishing this criticism.
In order to demonstrate the nature of
scholarship as an instrument of domination
Said excoriates scholars of the Middle East
for dividing into categories, classifying,
indexing, and documenting "everything in
sight (and out of sight)." 30 Does this, asks
the Syrian philosopher Sadiq Jalal al-Azm,
imply something vicious or is it simply
characteristic of all scientific academic
work, essential for a proper understanding
of
human
societies
and
cultures
altogether? 31 Thus, Said's condemnation of
the generalizations made by Western
scholars of the Middle East and his
insistence that they study the Arabs and
Muslims as individuals made some of his
Arab critics wonder if this meant that it was
impossible or unnecessary to study
collective entities. If the inclusion of Marx
in Orientalism comes from his lack of
attention to individual cases, added James
Clifford rhetorically, perhaps it is simply
impossible to form social or cultural theory,
and perhaps there is no room for research
fields such as sociology?32
Said's over-generalized and non-historic
conception of "Orientalism" is at its most
radical when he writes that "every
European, in what he could say about the
Middle East Review of International Affairs, Vol. 10, No. 1 (March 2006)
29
Joshua Teitelbaum and Meir Litvak
Orient, was a racist, and imperialist, and
almost totally ethnocentric. "33 According to
Nikki Keddie, who was praised by Said and
who found positive points in his book, this
argument generally encourages people to
believe Westerners have no right to study
the Middle East and insists that only
Muslims and Arabs can investigate
correctly Middle Eastern history. 34
Even the doyen of Middle Eastern
scholarship of the Middle East, Albert
Hourani, a Christian Arab like Said, shared
the feeling that the book might lend support
to a Muslim counter-attack based on the
idea that no one understands Islam better
than Muslims. 35 While Said denied that this
was his intention, 36 the actual text of the
book and the conclusion of many readers
belie this assertion. Moreover, disqualifying
all researchers who come outside the
examined group --in every area of the
world--would put an end to all serious
academic research. It also neglects the fact
that outside researchers may have certain
advantages, since as an outsider the scholar
might be free from the myths or
preconceptions which insiders share.
Said also raises a doubt as to whether
anyone can study (in his words,
"represent ") any subject in any manner
other than in an entirely subjective way,
which is determined by the culture of the
scholar-observer. He believes that the
unknown, the exotic, and the foreign have
always been perceived, assimilated, and
represented in these terms. This leads him
to doubt that any scholarship can even
come close to the truth, or in his words,
"whether indeed there can be a true
representation of anything, or whether any
or all representations, because they are
representations," are so intertwined with the
institutions, language, and culture of the
representer to render the truth impossible. 37
30
The obvious conclusion from this
argument, as Winder and al- Azm show, is
that according to Said, "Orientalism" is
inevitable since such distortions are
inevitable. If one accepts this argument,
however, as al-Azm suggests, this only
means the West was merely doing what all
cultures must do: examine other cultures
through the concepts and frameworks it
already holds. 38
If this is true, Winder explains, that
everyone who sees the "other" distorts it,
then the West is no different from other
cultures, including Islamic culture, which
also has a distorted perspective of the
"other." If indeed, Winder wonders, Said
demands that Westerners should be better,
does he not accept that they have a certain
supremacy, a certain mission that makes
them superior? Or should different criteria
apply to the West simply because it was
more "successful" than other societies?
Thus, Said himself is promoting a clearly
"Orientalist" perspective, accepting and
forgiving the "weakness" of Middle Eastern
society. "Westerners," claims Winder, "are
not better, but Western science, including
'Orientalism,' is self-bettering in that it is
self-corrective." 39 By determining that all
"representations " of the other are by
definition distortions, Said is saying that
people can only study themselves, that only
Muslims can properly "represent" Islam.
In our experience this has led to a
crippling timidity amongst non-Muslim or
non-Arab students. While it is good
scholarship to control for bias, Said's
influence has made students chary of
writing about Islam and the Arabs from a
point of view not necessarily shared by the
objects of their research. They give more
weight to an Arab or Islamic viewpoint and
are fearful of developing an opinion of their
own.
Middle East Review of International Affairs, Vol. 10, No. 1 (March 2006)
Students, Teachers, and Edward Said: Taking Stock of Orientalism
ORIENTAL
STUDIES
AND
IMPERIALISM
Said 's selectivity drove him to ignore the
important intellectual achievement of the
German and Hungarian scholars of the
Middle East. According to his argument,
"the major steps in Oriental scholarship
were first taken in either Britain and France
[sic], then elaborated upon by Germans."40
There is no historical basis for this
argument. The main reason for his ignoring
research in these countries is that an
accurate assessment of it would have
undermined his central argument that
Orientalism was integrally linked to
imperialism as an expression of the nexus
between knowledge and power, and
therefore that Orientalists wished to gain
knowledge of the Orient in order to control
it. To support his claims, Said even backdated the development of British and
French imperialism in the Middle East to
the seventeenth century, which is clearly a
historical error. Considering German
leadership in Oriental studies, it is unlikely
that they took much from British and
French scholars.
No doubt, agrees Bernard Lewis, some
of the scholars of the Middle East served
imperialism or gained from it. Yet as an
explanation of academic research of the
Islamic world as a whole, this argument is
flawed. If the effort to gain power through
knowledge is the main or only motive, why
did the study of Arabic and Islam in Europe
begin hundred of years before Western
imperialism in the Middle East had
appeared even as an ambition? Why did
these studies blossom in European countries
that didn't take part in the European
domination effort? Why did scholars invest
so much effort in trying to decipher or
study the monuments of the ancient East
which had no political value and were
forgotten even by the local people? The
importance of the German and Hungarian
scholars was tremendous in terms of their
contribution to Middle East scholarship,
even though they were not residents of
countries with any imperialist interest in the
region, and therefore the connection
between power and knowledge did not exist
in this case, sums up Lewis. 41 Said also
ignored the fact that many scholars opposed
imperialism, and therefore the connection
he creates between their academic works
and imperialism is forced.
Edmond Burke, like Said, criticizes
Oriental studies scholars who at the start of
the twentieth century dealt with minor
issues: "studies on obscure manuscripts,
folk traits, rural sufism and popular
religion, " instead of dealing with topics he
considered to be more important, such as
study of the national movements that
developed in the region. 42 Yet again, if
these scholars were so "impractical, " then
obviously their studies had to do more with
a search for knowledge rather than an effort
to help imperialism. Ironically, if they had
been as Said and Burke would have them,
they would have focused on precisely the
issues Burke criticizes them for ignoring. It
appears then that many of Said's
"Orientalists" actually pursued knowledge
for the sake of knowledge. Said cannot
have it both ways, complaining that
scholars of Islam and the Middle East dealt
with the trivial and at the same time
asserting they were agents of imperialistic
domination.
In addition if there were any researchers
who participated in an "academic effort to
embalm Islam, " to use Said 's words, these
were the Germans, but this was not because
of imperialism. This was rather due to their
more comprehensive approach to the study
of cultures, which they applied to their own
Middle East Review of International Affairs, Vol. 10, No. 1 (March 2006)
31
Joshua Teitelbaum and Meir Litvak
society as well. It is very likely, writes
Emmanuel Sivan, that if the Germans had
been involved in the imperialist effort, they
would have been more conscious of Islam
being a living and dynamic tradition.
Actually, the British and the French, who
imitated the Germans, could not afford to
be pure classicists because of their country's
imperialist demands. They studied Islam as
a living civilization. Sivan concludes that
the reality of the situation was much more
complicated and ironic than that presented
by Said.43 While Said disregarded German
Middle Eastern studies scholars because
they were not connected to imperialism, if
he had taken the time to examine their
work, he would have discove red that many
saw Islam and the Middle East in all its
variety, without essentializing. 44
Al-Azm raises another issue, namely,
the problematic cause and effect connection
that Said makes between Orientalism as a
cultural-social
phenomenon
and
imperialism. It is impossible to avoid the
impression, al- Azm remarks, that for Said
the presence of observers, administrators,
and intruders in the Middle East--such as
Napoleon, Cromer, and Balfour--had
become inevitable and actually was caused
by literary and intellectual Orientalism.
Therefore, according to Said, we can
understand better the political inclinations
and the aspirations of European imperialists
if we turn to literary figures, among them
Barthélemy d'Herbelot and Dante Alighieri,
rather than if we actually explore strategic
and economical interests. 45
Another difficulty in Said 's approach of
connecting
academic
research
to
imperialism lays, according to Halliday, in
the assumption that if ideas come to the
world in circumstances of domination or
even directly in the service of the
dominator, they are not valid. Yet
32
according the Halliday, trying to subdue a
land requires producing as accurate an
image as possible of it. For example,
French ethnographers serving French
imperialism in North Africa did not
necessarily produce worthless research, as
Said would have his readers believe. On the
contrary, in order for the studies of those
academic researchers to serve the French,
they had to be accurate. "To put it bluntly, "
writes Halliday, "if you want to rob a bank,
you would be well advised to have a pretty
accurate map if its layout….."46
An ironic twist to the connection
between political establishments and
scholarship was visible after Martin
Kramer's fierce attack against the American
academy for identifying with Said's
Orientalism critique. Kramer argued that
Middle
Eastern
studies
were
so
compromised by Said 's world view that
they should no longer receive U.S.
government aid. Said's supporters, who in
the past had attacked the connection
between academic research and the political
establishment, were quite alarmed at the
notion. In effect they were arguing that the
large amounts of monies their institutions
took from the government did not
undermine their intellectual independence,
even as many of them characterized U.S.
policy as imperialistic. Clearly, they do not
really believe that a connection with the
political
establishment,
even
an
"imperialistic " one, has any effect on their
own research. Yet if that is so, then
government funding doe s not necessarily
influence academic discourse. If this is true
of today, it might well be true of the past as
well, despite Said's critique.
Middle East Review of International Affairs, Vol. 10, No. 1 (March 2006)
Students, Teachers, and Edward Said: Taking Stock of Orientalism
"REPRESENTATION"
AND
HISTORICAL TRUTH
Said 's focus on Orientalism as a
discourse of power, and apparently his
background as a literary critic (and not as a
historian), led him to argue that the "things
to look at are style, figures of speech,
setting, narrative devices, historical and
social circumstances, not the correctness of
the representation nor its fid elity to some
great original." In other words: "The
phenomenon of Orientalism as I study it
here deals principally, not with a
correspondence between Orientalism and
the Orient, but with the internal consistency
of Orientalism and its ideas about the
Orient…despite
or
beyond
any
correspondence, or lack thereof, with a 'real'
Orient. "47 This approach, which is largely
influenced by the post- modern discourse
popular in the field of literary criticism-Said's primary expertise--leads him to
ignore the possibility that representation
includes reliable and precise information as
well. He never analyzes profoundly or
refutes the Middle Eastern studies
literature, he merely argues over its style
and motives.
Halliday, as a positivist scholar who
believes that historical reality is the
important
factor
and
not
simply
representation,
doubts
whether
the
discourse criticism in literature can be used
for social sciences as well and questions
whether historical research can be treated
like literary analysis. Halliday even argues
that Said's basic approach is similar to those
whom Said accuses of "Orientalism, " since
both put a priority on what is termed (in
different theoretical frameworks) ideology,
discourse, or political culture. 48
Lewis is most severe in his criticism of
Said's epistemological conception, which is
influenced by Michel Foucault and which
draws on post- modernist ideas. According
to Said 's approach, says Lewis, every
discourse is an expression of a motive to
rule, and all knowledge is distorted.
Therefore, absolute truth does not exist or is
not attainable. Thus, the truth is not
important and even the facts are not
important, nor is the evidence. Most
important is the approach--the motives and
intentions--of those who use knowledge. 49
An example of this problematic aspect
of the Orientalist critique, which ascribes
far more importance to the researcher's
inclinations than to the empirical basis of
his findings, is to be found in the complaint
of Palestinian researcher Hisham Sharabi
about Lewis himself. Sharabi attacks Lewis
for saying that German nationalism had
affected the Arab political arena in the
1930s and 1940s more than patriotism in its
British or French form. He then takes Lewis
to task for his claim regarding the influence
of pro-Nazi and Fascist movements in the
Arab world in the 1930s and 1940s. Sharabi
is angered because Lewis quotes the Syrian
politician Sami al-Jundi, who wrote in his
memoirs: "We were racists, we admired
Nazism, read the books and the sources
from which its ideas derived. " Nowhere
does Sharabi refute Lewis's arguments or
demonstrate that he distorts reality or
misquoted al-Jundi. He is angry because
Lewis seemingly quotes this passage that
presents the Arabs in an unfavorable light
"with satisfaction. "50
THE ESSENTIALIST DICHOTOMY
BETWEEN THE ORIENT AND THE
OCCIDENT
There is a contradiction between two
central arguments in Said's approach. On
the one hand , he writes that Orientalism
created the Orient and that it is merely a
"construction" of the Orientalists which
Middle East Review of International Affairs, Vol. 10, No. 1 (March 2006)
33
Joshua Teitelbaum and Meir Litvak
does not exist in reality. On the other hand,
throughout his book, he repeats the premise
of an unchanging relationship between a
West that was hostile as far back as ancient
Greece, and a victimized Orient, as if these
two entities were indeed historical realities.
The result is that Said himself establishes a
false dichotomy between East and West. He
depicts the West and the East in the same
essentialist and ahistorical manner which is
unchanging across time and against which
he rails.
While critical of the Western media 's
treatment of Islamic countries and its
ignoring of the role of the imperialist
powers in forming the painful history of the
region, at the same time, Janet Afary sees
Said's criticism as a "mirror image of the
colonialist discourse which he dissects."
According to her, Said 's weltanschauung is
"Manichaean…in
which
the
West
represents the dominant male and the East-the subservient female locations." In so
doing, he ignores such matters as "[e]thnic
complexities,
class,
and
gender
divisions…" and "the problematic role of
religion and its unhappy coexistence with
democracy." 51 In his description of the
Orient as helpless under the Orientalists, or
in his own words, "it is perhaps true that
Islam has produced no very powerful visual
aesthetic
tradition," 52
Said
himself
surrenders to the very Orientalist discourse
which he excoriates for presenting Islam as
inferior. If he had an awareness of such
architectural marvels as the Dome of the
Rock, the mosque of Ibn Tulun, or the truly
spectacular Islamic metal, ceramic, and
glassware on exhibit around the world, he
might not have made such an assertion. He
also states that there is a lack of good
libraries in the Middle East, which is surely
not the case. 53
34
By attempting to impute such rigid
roles and natures to the West and the
East, Said not only underestimates the
contributions of Islamic societies, but
also commits the sin of "essentialism"
which he so reviles. Joel Kraemer noted
that it is impossible to attribute ancient
Greek philosophy and science to an
essential West and remove it from the
Middle East. The works of Plato,
Aristotle, Ptolemy and Galen spoke to
the hearts of the three main civilizations
of the Middle Ages--Arab-Muslim,
Byzantine, and Latin--each in its own
special way. The Arab role in absorbing
and assimilating the scientific and
philosophical Greek classics and then
transferring them to Europe is known to
all. Yet this historical phenomenon does
not interest Said at all, for it contradicts
his fixation on the dichotomous contrast
between cultures. Islamic civilization
grew and blossomed in a direct and
intimate link to the other civilizations in
the Mediterranean basin. Many scholars
of Islam therefore deliberated the
question whether to see it as a part of the
European cultural sphere or that of the
Middle East. Most of them believed that
it stood alongside European culture,
sharing one degree of closeness or
another; not in opposition, but as a
neighbor.54
THE CENTRALITY OF ISLAM
No doubt, one of the main failures of
classical Oriental studies was the
perception of Islam--defined by its
tradition and classic texts--as an
independent variable in history and as the
dominant explanation--and sometimes
the only one--of historical phenomena in
the Middle East. This attitude resulted
from the perception of human history as
Middle East Review of International Affairs, Vol. 10, No. 1 (March 2006)
Students, Teachers, and Edward Said: Taking Stock of Orientalism
based on civilizations defined by culture
and religion, and from the idea that the
right way to learn religion was through
religious texts and languages.55 Said is
absolutely right when saying that the
emphasis on the classical texts resulted in
an essentialist perception of Islam as
static, unchangeable , and backward
compared to Europe, and in an overestimation of Islam as the only source of
each and every phenomenon in the
Middle East. Said goes even further and
claims that the essentialist perception
brought Oriental studies scholars to use
texts, such as the Koran, in order to
explain different aspects of contemporary
Arab society. 56
But an important explanation for this
mistaken perception of a frozen Islam
eludes Said, even though he correctly
pointed out the phenomenon. The idea of
a frozen Islam, argues Robert Irwin,
often resulted from the scholars'
overestimation of their sources. Yet here,
even if they were wrong, their problem
came from paying respectful attention to
Muslim perceptions and not ignoring
them. For instance, many European
philologists accepted without objection
the arguments of the Arab grammarians
themselves that the Arab language was
an unchanging one. A similar approach
can be seen in Lewis's article on Ottoman
observers,
which
accepts
their
observations on the decline of their
empire as an undisputed historical fact
rather than as a product of a then-current
pessimistic weltanschauung, or of the
bitterness of those who had identified
their loss in political and social struggles
as the alleged decline of the empire as a
whole.57 In these cases and others, even
when the classical Oriental studies
scholars were wrong, they were not
arguing from a position of scorn or
condescension toward the people they
were studying, but rather accepting ideas
that originated with the members of the
studied culture.
For his part, however, working from
within his Orientalist critique, Said reaches
a radically different conclusion, which
entirely removes Islam from having any
role whatsoever in the shaping of the
region's history. In his review of
Orientalism, Kerr agrees that not
everything can be explained through Islam,
but wonders whether Said takes into
account that Islamic doctrine both claims
and aspires to deal with all aspects of life,
while stressing that man's spiritual purpose
is not separate from his temporal one. How
does Said view phenomena such as
Ayatollah Khomeini or the Muslim
Brothers, he asks. 58
Said's tendency to underestimate the
importance--if not to erase the influence--of
religion and history on the modern Middle
Eastern prompted a number of Arab
critiques of his work. These writers, mostly
leftists who had fought to bring social
changes in their countries, failed in their
struggle against various beliefs and
concepts, such as discrimination against
women, precisely because their fellow
citizens believed that such ideas were
Islamic. The paradox, as Sivan showed, is
that Arab leftist scholars, who carried out
field studies in the Middle East, reached
conclusions that were not far from those of
the Middle Eastern studies scholars
identified by Said with racism and
imperialism. 59
By ignoring the importance of religion
in the region, Said and others critical of
"Orientalism" fall into an internal
contradiction. They attack "Orientalism" as
a discourse which formulates consciousness
Middle East Review of International Affairs, Vol. 10, No. 1 (March 2006)
35
Joshua Teitelbaum and Meir Litvak
and leads to action, while simultaneously
ignoring the Islamic discourse and its
influence on the development of
perceptions which can lead to actual deeds.
One of the outcomes of this contradiction is
the common claim by the critics of
"Orientalism" that there is no connection
between violence and religion. Without
disregarding the importance of the deep
social, economic, and political roots of
terrorism, it is clear to anyone who lives in
the Middle East that the religious discourse
and weltanschauung has a profound impact
on the politics and society of the region.
Ignoring the religion of Islam, claims
Kramer, caused Said and his supporters to
profoundly misunderstand the rise of
Islamism as a significant political power in
the Middle East since the 1980s. A perfect
example of this ignorance is Said 's
dismissing in the period before the
September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks
"speculations about the latest conspiracy to
blow up buildings, sabotage commercial
airliners and poison water supplies" as
"highly exaggerated stereotyping."60
EMPATHY AND SYMPATHY
As an alternative to Orientalism, Said
correctly maintains that researchers should
feel empathy toward those they are
studying. Indeed, empathy is truly a useful
heuristic device. Yet he goes far beyond
this
by
demanding
that
scholars
demonstrate actual sympathy and political
support for the objects of their study: "I
doubt that there can be any substitute for a
genuinely engaged and sympathetic--as
opposed to a narrowly political or hostile -attitude to the Islamic world," he wrote, and
complained elsewhere that "no person
academically involved with the Near East-no Orientalist that is--has ever in the United
States culturally and politically identified
36
himself wholeheartedly with the Arabs."61
Apart from the fact that this is empirically
wrong, it is against the most basic
principles of scholarship. As Winder says,
"identifying with" is not an acceptable
criteria for research and scholarship. 62 It is
worth asking if Said himself would demand
that scholars of Zionism, which he opposed
with all his might, adopt the same stand that
he demands of scholars of the Middle East.
Louis Massignon is one of the few
scholars who merits Said 's praises. He
emphasizes Massignon's deep empathy for
Islamic mysticism, his nuanced description,
and broad scope. Yet while Said thinks it is
sufficient to note Massignon's style and
sympathy, argues al-Azm, he fits into Said's
Orientalist stereotype. Precisely because he
stressed there being a timeless "spiritual
dimension" of Eastern culture, Massignon
argued that the East and the West were
distinguished by the difference between
tradition and modernity. If so, what makes
Massignon so unique? It seems that the
reason is not his methodology, but his
persona as a "tireless fighter on behalf of
Muslim civilization, " his support of the
Palestinian refugees, and his "defense of
Arab Muslim and Christian rights in
Palestine," according to Said. 63 While Said
attacks scholars who are connected to
power centers in the West, he does not
reject the involvement of academics in
political struggles. On the contrary, for Said
it is a virtue, as long as they are on right
side, with views that match his own. 64
IMPLICATIONS
FOR
MID DLE
EASTERN STUDIES
Said's Orientalism did ha ve a salubrious
effect to the extent that it brought into
greater relief the influence of discourse on
academic writing, particularly with respect
to the analysis of the "other. " Many
Middle East Review of International Affairs, Vol. 10, No. 1 (March 2006)
Students, Teachers, and Edward Said: Taking Stock of Orientalism
scholars did need to be reminded of the
humanity of their subjects, and their
empathy needed to be strengthened.
Moreover, there is no doubt that much of
Middle Eastern studies was outdated and in
need of serious revision, particularly in
view of new developments in historical
research as well as in such social science
fields as sociology and anthropology.
That said, overall Said 's book had a
negative impact. It was gladly accepted by
Islamist circles in the Middle East which
saw it as a pro-Islamic, anti-Western
document.
The
book
provided
a
confirmation from the "inside " of their
long- held suspicions toward Western
researchers for being, so to speak, agents of
their countries, as well as the view that
Western rese arch is part of a scheme to ruin
Islam's reputation. Later, Said claimed that
this factor was the aspect of the book's
reception that he most regretted. He added
that Orientalism could be understood as a
defense of Islam only if half his argument
were igno red. The answer to this selfjustification is that if so many people
"misinterpret" a certain essay, the
misinterpretation is probably embedded in
the contents and arguments made by it.
Kramer argues that it was possible to ignore
half of the argument since the book's tone
carried the message that the Islamists
understood. 65
Another problem, noticed mostly by
Said's Arab critics, is that his arguments
also served as ammunition for Islamists and
Arab nationalists to counter any criticism of
the status quo in the Arab world as Arab
Orientalism. Kanan Makiya 66 wrote that the
book "unwittingly deflected from the real
problems of the Middle East at the same
time as it contributed more bitterness to the
armory" of young Arabs. 67 Whether or not
Said so intended, according to Sivan, he
provided major assistance to intellectual
trends of apologetics in the Arab world
which blamed all its problems on
outsiders.68 This factor made it harder to
improve politics and life in the Arab world
and thus damaged the interests of the Arabs
themselves. Said attacked Fouad Ajami and
Kanan Makiya as writers who do not
sympathize with the Arabs. He described
Makiya--who exposed the oppression of
Arabs and Muslims by Saddam Hussein's
regime in Iraq--with contempt as a "native
informant" who serves the interests of
American policymakers.69 For Said, Fouad
Ajami is "a second -rate scholar who has
written one collection of essays...and a very
bad history of Musa Sadr."70
There is a paradox in the fact that a large
part of Said's supporters joined with the
Islamists or with supporters of the status
quo by rejecting any criticism of the Arab
world as "Orientalism. " It is equally ironic
that it is Arab leftists who often criticize
their society and raise arguments similar to
those of Elie Kedourie, who is denigrated
as an "Orientalist" by Said and his
supporters. This kind of agreement, of a
conservative intellectual like Kedourie and
radical Arab critics attacked by Said raise
the question of who is helping the Arabs in
the long run--those willing to sincerely
engage with crises plaguing Arab society,
or those who whitewash them by saying
that criticism represents a distorted Western
approach?71
Said's criticism contributed to the further
politicization of Middle Eastern studies,
which was already quite politicized by the
Arab-Israeli conflict. Nikki Keddie noted
that in the field the word "Orientalist " is
thrown around in a general derogatory
sense, directed against those who adopt "the
wrong" approach on the conflict or who are
perceived as too conservative. She stated
Middle East Review of International Affairs, Vol. 10, No. 1 (March 2006)
37
Joshua Teitelbaum and Meir Litvak
that for many people the word substitutes
for thought and enables people to dismiss
certain scholars and their works. "I think
that is too bad, " she said. "It may not have
been what Edward Said meant at all, but the
term has become kind of a slogan." 72
No less severe is the contribution of
Orientalism to creating an almost
McCarthyist atmosphere in the American
academy, one that chokes debates and
arguments. Haideh Moghissi, an Iranian
scholar, feminist and activist, complained
that "fear of Orientalism is haunting studies
of the Middle East, and particularly the
study of women's experience in various
Middle Eastern and Islamic societies. It is
used to discourage critical thinking and
self-criticism…." 73
Henry Munson criticized the fact that
many American researchers are so
determined to refute any negative
stereotypes of Islam that they tend to
idealize everything that is Muslim,
including radical Islamist movements.
According to him, many tend to ignore key
features of radical Islamism, ranging from
anti-Semitic conspiracy theories to the
threat of those movements to human rights.
Munson added that those who think Kramer
exaggerated in estimating Said's influence
on Middle Eastern research in the United
States need to acknowledge the fact that a
scholar who dares discuss discrimination
against the Baha'is in Iran, slavery in
Sudan, or the Islamist persecution of
intellectuals in Egypt stands in danger of
being called an Orientalist, a Zionist, or an
agent of America n imperialism. 74
An expression of this phenomenon can
be seen in an article in the New York Times
about a book suggesting a new reading of
the Koran based on Syro-Aramaic sources.
What is disturbing is that the author felt he
had to write under a pseudonym and had
38
difficulties finding a publisher, even though
several leading scholars saw him as a
trailblazer. The reason, explains the
newspaper, is not just the fear that radical
Islamist circles see him as a second Salman
Rushdie, but fear of the Western academy.
The Times quoted a scholar at an American
university: "Between fear and political
correctness, it's not possible to say anything
other than sugary nonsense about Islam. "
Like the author of the new book on the
Koran, he asked that his name be withheld,
and referred to possible violence, within the
context of the reluctance on U.S. campuses
to criticize other cultures.75 The fact that
scholars fear presenting the fruits of their
research lest they be accused of
"Orientalism" demonstrates clearly that
there is a crisis in Middle Eastern studies.
CONCLUSION
Despite the positive contribution of
Orientalism in increasing the awareness of
scholars to cultural biases and the
importance of discourse in shaping
research, the harm the book wrought was
no less great. Apart from unfounded
historical
generalizations
on
the
development of Middle Eastern studies in
the West, on "representing" Islam in the
West, and on Middle Eastern society itself,
even to the point of adopting essentialist
approaches which he himself attacked,
there are several methodological failures in
the book which cast a shadow over Said's
writing. Amongst these one can point to the
unspoken demand that the scholar identify
with the object of his research as a
precondition for research aptitude; giving
preference to matters of presentation (or, in
Saidian terms, "representation") over
aiming at empirical and historical truth; and
ignoring Islam as a significant cultural
discourse, a key factor in the formation of
Middle East Review of International Affairs, Vol. 10, No. 1 (March 2006)
Students, Teachers, and Edward Said: Taking Stock of Orientalism
Middle Eastern politics and society. The
principle problem in Said's criticism is its
contribution
to
the
exaggerated
politicization of Middle Eastern studies and
transforming it into a hegemonic discourse
which silences all self- criticism, for selfcriticism is the essence of all academic
research.
As we reflect back on more than a
quarter century since the publication of
Orientalism, it seems that Arab intellectuals
in the Middle East are more self-critical
than ever before. The Internet, an opening
up of the press, and satellite television have
increased the amount of public space for
airing opinion. Self-criticism in the Middle
East is flourishing. 76 For many years,
Middle Eastern studies in the West has
suffered from a kind of self-censorship that
threatened to destroy "the free spirit of
inquiry, discovery, and expression which
has inspired and guided the whole modern
movement of scholarship and science."77 It
is our hope that the opening up of debate in
the Middle East--be it with respect to
women's issues, Islam, democracy, or peace
with Israel--will serve as an example,
loosening up the stifling effect that Said had
on Middle Eastern studies scholarship in
the Western academy.
* Joshua Teitelbaum is Senior Fellow,
Moshe Dayan Center for Middle East and
African Studies, Tel Aviv University, and
Adjunct Senior Lecturer in the Department
of Middle Eastern History, Bar Ilan
University. Meir Litvak is Senior Fellow at
the Moshe Dayan Center for Middle East
and African Studies, and Senior Lecturer in
the Department of Middle Eastern and
African History, Tel Aviv University. Dr.
Teitelbaum began his studies at UCLA in
1976; Dr. Litvak began his at Tel Aviv
University in 1980. In this article, they
reflect on the influence of Said's
Orientalism throughout their years of
studying and teaching about Islam and the
Middle East. They hope it will be useful to
students and teachers alike. This is a
revised and expanded version of an article
which appeared in Hamizrah Hehadash,
Vol. 45 (2005).
NOTES
1
For example, a look at the thousands of
books and articles covering all aspects of
the French Revolution, from gender
relations to politics of memory, could only
make Middle Eastern studies scholars
envious of their fellow academics.
2
Edward W. Said, Orientalism (New York:
Vintage Books, 1978).
3
An example of the influence of this
process in a research field close to that of
the Middle East is the rise of the
Revisionist trend in Cold War studies,
which mostly blamed the conflict on the
United States.
4
Martin Kramer, Ivory Towers on Sand:
The Failure of Middle Eastern Studies in
America, (Washington, D.C.: Vintage
Books, 2000), pp. 32-33.
5
Edward W. Said, "East Isn't East: The
Impending End of the Age of Orientalism,"
Times Literary Supplement, February 3,
1995, p. 3; Said, Orientalism, p. 5.
6
Said, Orientalism, pp. 2-3, 12, 41-42, 70,
202-03; Fred Halliday, "Orientalism and its
Critics," British Journal of Middle Eastern
Studies, Vol. 20, No. 2 (1993), pp. 148-49.
7
Edward W. Said, "The Intellectual Origins
of Imperialism and Zionism," Gazelle
Review of Literature on the Middle East,
No. 2 (1977), p. 48; Edward W. Said,
Covering Islam: How the Media and the
Experts Determine How We See the Rest of
Middle East Review of International Affairs, Vol. 10, No. 1 (March 2006)
39
Joshua Teitelbaum and Meir Litvak
the World (New York:Random House,
1981), p. 41; Said, Orientalism , p. 273.
8
Michel Foucault, L'ordre du discourse
(Paris: Flammarion, 1971), pp. 27-28,
quoted in Alan Sheridan, Michel Foucault:
The Will to Truth (New York: Routledge,
1980), p. 125.
9
Michel Foucault, "Théories et institutions
pénales," Annuaire du College de France,
1971-1972, p. 283, cited in Sheridan,
Michel Foucault, p. 125.
10
Michael Sprinker, "The Use and Abuse
of Foucault," Humanities in Society Vol. 3,
No. 1 (1980), p. 2.
11
Quoted in Sprinker, "The Use and Abuse
of Foucault, " p. 8.
12
Said, Orientalism, p. 3.
13
Ibid, p. 12; Said, Covering Islam, p. 17.
14
Said, "East isn't East"; Said, Orientalism,
pp. 59-60; Edward W. Said, "Islam through
Western Eyes," The Nation, March 26,
1980, original emphasis.
15
Said, Orientalism, p. 14; Said, "East Isn't
East."
16
Kramer, Ivory Towers on Sand, p. 29.
17
Said, Orientalism, p. 17.
18
Said, "Islam through Western Eyes";
Said, Orientalism, p. 204.
19
Clifford Geertz, "Conjuring with Islam,"
New York Review of Books, May 27, 1982,
p. 28; Emmanuel Sivan, "Edward Said and
His Arab Reviewers," in Emmanuel Sivan
(ed.), Interpretations of Islam: Past and
Present, (Princeton: Darwin Press, 1985),
pp. 134-35, 137.
20
Kramer, Ivory Towers on Sand, p. 29.
21
Said, Orientalism, p. 209; Joel Kraemer,
"Three Saidian Fallacies," paper presented
at the Dayan Center for Middle Eastern and
African Studies Conference, "Knowledge,
Power and Society," January 1994; L. I.
Conrad, "Ignaz Goldziher on Ernest Renan:
From Orientalist Philology to the Study of
40
Islam," Martin Kramer (ed.), The Jew ish
Discovery of Islam, (Tel Aviv: The Moshe
Dayan Center for Middle Eastern and
African Studies, 1999), pp. 137-80.
22
Malcolm H. Kerr, "Review of
'Orientalism'," International Journal of
Middle Eastern Studies, Vol. 12, No. 4
(1980),
pp. 544-47; Jane Miller,
Seductions: Studies in Reading and
Culture, (London: Virago,1990); and Reina
Lewis, Gendering Orientalism: Race,
Femininity and Representation, (New York:
Routledge, 1995), cited in Bill Ashcroft and
Pal Ahluwaila, Edward Said: The Paradox
of Identity, (London: Routledge, 1999), p.
83.
23
Geoffrey Nash, "Revisiting Pro-Muslim
British Orientalists," ISIM Review, Vol. 16
(Autumn 2006), p. 47.
24
Kramer, Ivory Towers on Sand, p. 29;
Maxime Rodinson, Europe and the
Mystique of Islam, (Seattle: Washington
University Press, 1987), pp. 45 ff.
25
Albert Hourani, Islam in European
Thought,
(Cambridge:
Cambridge
University Press, 1991), pp. 13 ff; Alastair
Hamilton, "Western Attitudes to Islam in
the Enlightenment," Middle Eastern
Lectures, Vol. 3 (1999), pp. 69-87; Robert
Irwin, "Oriental Discourses in Orientalism,"
Middle Eastern Lectures, Vol. 3 (1999), pp.
87-110.
26
Edward W. Said, The Question of
Palestine, (New York: Vintage Books,
1980), p. 29.
27
Keith Windschuttle, "Edward Said's
'Orientalism'
Revisited,"
at
www.newcriterion.com/archive/17/jan99/sa
id.htm.
28
Kramer, Ivory Towers on Sand, p. 29;
R.Bayly Winder, "Orientalism: Review
Article," Middle East Journal, Vol. 35, No.
4 (1981), pp. 615-19.
Middle East Review of International Affairs, Vol. 10, No. 1 (March 2006)
Students, Teachers, and Edward Said: Taking Stock of Orientalism
29
Rodinson, Europe and the Mystique of
Islam , p. 131.
30
Said, Orientalism, p. 86.
31
Sadik Jalal al-Azm, "Orientalism and
Orientalism in Reverse," Jon Rothschild
(ed.), Forbidden Agendas: Intolerance and
Defiance in the Middle East (London: Al
Saqi Books, 1984), p. 354.
32
James Clifford, "Review of Orientalism,"
History and Theory, Vol. 19, No. 2 (1980),
p. 218.
33
Said, Orientalism, p. 204.
34
Keddie, cited in Kramer, Ivory Towers on
Sand, p. 36.
35
For interviews with Nikki Keddie and
Albert Houra ni see Nancy Elizabeth
Gallagher, Approaches to the History of the
Middle East , (London: Ithaca Press, 1994),
pp. 41, 144-145.
36
Said, "East Isn't East."
37
Said, Orientalism , pp. 67, 272 (emphasis
in original). It is curious, therefore, that
Said claims a few sentences earlier (p. 272)
that "Islam has been fundamentally
misrepresented in the West," since once
cannot misrepresent something that is, by
Said's definition, incapable of being
properly described (or "represented").
Emphasis in original.
38
Al-Azm, "Orientalism and Orientalism in
Reverse,"p. 355.
39
Winder, "Orientalism," p. 618, quoting
Francis Peters; al- Azm, "Orientalism and
Orientalism in Reverse," p. 54.
40
Said, Orientalism, pp. 17-18.
41
Bernard Lewis, "The Question of
Orientalism," in Bernard Lewis, Islam and
the West, (Oxford: Oxford University Press,
1993), pp. 117-18; Edmund Burke, III,
"Orientalism
and
World
History:
Representing Middle Eastern Nationalism
and Islamism in the Twentieth Century,"
Theory and Society Vol. 27, No. 4 (1998),
p. 490. For a similar approach on the part of
Said's Arab critics, who are partners in his
protest against Western imperialism, but
who distinguish between this and academic
research, see Sivan, "Edward Said and His
Arab Reviewers," p. 137.
42
Burke, Islam and the West, p. 493.
43
Sivan, "Edward Said and His Arab
Reviewers," p. 141.
44
See Todd Kontje, German Orientalisms,
(Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press,
2004), pp. 147-48. See also Baber
Johansen, "Politics, Paradigms and the
Progress of Oriental Studies: The German
Oriental
Society
(Deutsche
Morgenländische
Gesellschaft)
18451989," The Arab World in Scientific
Research (MARS), (Winter 1994), pp. 7994.
45
Al-Azm, "Orientalism and Orientalism in
Reverse," p. 353.
46
Halliday, "Orientalism and its Critics," p.
159-60; see similar arguments also in alAzm, "Orientalism and Orientalism in
Reverse," pp. 355-56; Sivan, "Edward Said
and His Arab Reviewers," p. 140.
47
Said, Orientalism, pp. 5, 21. Emphasis in
original.
48
Halliday, "Orientalism and its Critics,"
pp. 150,160.
49
Lewis, "The Question of Orientalism," p.
115.
50
Hisham Sharabi, "The Scholarly Point of
View: Politics, Perspectives, Paradigms," in
Hisham Sharabi (ed.), Theory, Politics and
the Arab World, (New York: Routledge
1990), pp. 14-15.
51
Janet Afary, The Iranian Constitutional
Revolution,
1906-1911:
Grassroots
Democracy, Social Democracy, and the
Origins of Feminism, (New York:
Columbia University Press, 1996), p. 11.
52
Said, Covering Islam, p. 61.
Middle East Review of International Affairs, Vol. 10, No. 1 (March 2006)
41
Joshua Teitelbaum and Meir Litvak
53
Said, Covering Islam, p. 53; Said,
Orientalism, p. 323.
54
Kramer, Ivory Towers on Sand.
55
Bernard Lewis falls into this trap in his
otherwise excellent book, when he refers to
the simultaneous invasion of China, India,
Africa, and Europe by the armies of
"Islam," as if they were some kind of
unified body acting in concert (Bernard
Lewis, What Went Wrong: Western Impact
and Middle Eastern Response, (Oxford:
Oxford University Press, 2002, p. 6).
56
Said, Orientalism, p. 52; Edward W.
Said, "Arabs, Islam and the Dogma of the
West," The New York Times Book Review,
October 31, 1976, p. 4.
57
Robert Irwin, "Oriental Discourses in
Orientalism," pp. 98-99; Bernard Lewis,
"Ottoman Observers of Ottoman Decline,"
Islamic Studies, Vol. 1 (1962), pp. 71-87.
58
Kerr, "Review of 'Orientalism'," p. 545.
59
Sivan, "Edward Said and His Arab
Reviewers," pp. 148-51.
60
Kramer, Ivory Towers on Sand, pp. 4460; Edward W. Said, Covering Islam, (New
York: Vintage Books, 1997), p. 11 (revised
edition).
61
Said, Orientalism, p. 27; Said, "Islam
Through Western Eyes"; see also his
complaint that "so many researchers of
Islam, including Bernard Lewis, see
themselves obliged to attack Arabs and
Muslims" (Said, "East Isn't East", p. 5).
Emphasis in original.
62
Winder, "Orientalism," p. 618.
63
For Said's words on Massignon see Said,
Orientalism,
pp.
268-70;
al-Azm,
"Orientalism and Orientalism in Reverse,"
p. 359.
64
Interview with Said, MERIP Report, No.
171 (July-August 1991), pp. 16, 18.
65
Kramer, Ivory Towers on Sand, pp. 4647. For instance, Islamist activists who
42
backed Ayatollah Khomeini's death
sentence fatwa against Satantic Verses
author Salman Rushdie, quoted Said's
essays as proof for the arguments against
Rushdie, even though Said himself came to
the author's defense. For Islamist criticisms
of Orientalists, see William Brinner, "An
anti-Orientalist Egyptian Author," in Hava
Lazarus-Yafeh (ed.), Muslim Authors on
Jews and Judaism (Jerusalem: Shazar
Center, 1996), pp. 247-65. The article
makes note of attacks on Jewish scholars.
66
Kanan Makiya is the author (under the
pseudonym Samir al-Khalil) of Republic of
Fear: The Inside Story of Saddam's Iraq
(New York: Pantheon Books, 1989), which
is a severe indictment of Saddam Hussein's
regime.
67
Kanan Makiya, Cruelty and Silence:
War, Tyranny and Uprising in the Arab
World, (New York: WW Norton, 1994), p.
318
68
For a broader discussion on this issue see
Emmanuel Sivan, "The Controversy over
Orientalism," Alpaim , Vol. 14 (1997), pp.
45-48.
69
Said, MERIP interview. It is interesting
that Said, who demands that scholars of the
Middle East be empathic and sympathetic,
takes an abusive language himself towards
his objects of research. For instance he
describes P.J. Vatikiotis as an "utterly
ninth-rate" scholar, a style which Rodinson
described as "a bit Stalinistic"; Kramer,
Ivory Towers on Sand, p. 38.
70
Edward Said, The Politics of
Dispossession: The Struggle for Palestinian
Self-Determination,
1969-1994,
(New
York: Pantheon Books, 1995), p. 308.
71
For example of Said's whitewash, see
Danny Postel, "Islamic Studies Young
Turks: New Generation of Scholars
Deplores Problems of Muslim World and
Middle East Review of International Affairs, Vol. 10, No. 1 (March 2006)
Students, Teachers, and Edward Said: Taking Stock of Orientalism
Seeks Internal Solutions," The Chronicle of
Higher Education, Vol. 13 (September
2002), p. 14a. Postel shows how many
liberal Muslim thinkers raise questions
regarding the crisis in Islam. The questions
are similar to those which were raised in
Lewis, What Went Wrong?.
72
Keddie, quoted in Kramer, Ivory Towers
on Sand, p. 37. Amy Singer, a graduate
student in Middle Eastern history at
Princeton in the early 1980s, remarked that
debate about the book greatly polarized the
students and faculty, an atmosphere that she
considered to be intimidating, and at times
silencing. See Amy Singer, "On Facing
'Orientalism' in Graduate School," paper
delivered at a conference on "Knowledge,
Power, and Society," Moshe Dayan Center,
Tel Aviv University, January 17-19, 1994.
Today, Singer believes that some positive
things emerged from the entire "event," but
that the balance sheet is rather mixed.
Personal communication.
73
Haideh Moghissi, Populism and
Feminism in Iran, (New York: St. Martin's
Press, 1994), p.8.
74
Henry Munson, "Intolerable Tolerance:
Western
Academia
and
Islamic
Fundamentalism," Connection, Vol. 5, No.
3 (1996), pp. 99-117; Henry Munson,
"Between Pipes and Esposito," ISIM
Newsletter, No. 10 (July 2002), p. 8. See a
similar argument in Charles P. Freund,
"2001 Nights: The End of Orientalist
Critique," Reasononline, December 2000,
http://www.reason.com/0112/cr.cf.2001.sht
ml.
75
Alexander Stille, "Scholars Are Quietly
Offering New Theories of the Koran," New
York Times, March 2, 2002. As far as we
can tell, the pseudonymous author of the
book (originally published in German in
2002), "Christoph Luxenberg," has yet to
find a publisher in English.
76
See Barry Rubin, The Long War for
Freedom: The Arab Struggle for
Democracy in the Middle East , (New York:
Wiley Press, 2005).
77
Bernard Lewis, "The State of Middle
Eastern Studies," American Scholar, Vol.
48 (Summer 1979), p. 381.
Middle East Review of International Affairs, Vol. 10, No. 1 (March 2006)
43