{"title":"东方主义,反东方主义,相对主义","authors":"R. Chuaqui, M. Brudzinski","doi":"10.4324/9780429027239-6","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"The question of Orientalism, as everyone knows, has been the subject of intense debate in the last quarter century. Figuring most prominently in these discussions are the contributions of Edward Said and the reactions they have inspired. But these contributions themselves have a long history. Said’s Orientalism (1980 [1978]) is the first work in a trilogy that also includes The Question of Palestine (1979) and Covering Islam (1981).1 On various occasions, Said has reconsidered and refined the positions he took in Orientalism. Almost seventeen years after the first edition of this book, Said wrote the article “East Isn’t East: The Impending End of the Age of Orientalism” (1995).2 In fact he had already reassessed the question in “Orientalism Reconsidered” (Said 1985).3 Orientalism has met with unique fortune. The culmination of several decades of critical research, the bookhas served as the point of departure for new contributions by authors from different parts of the planet—and not only from the territories, nations, and ethnic groups that have endured the centuries-old expansion of Europe and of Europe’s extensions. Participants have also come to this project from the ex-colonial metropolises themselves, and more generally, from what we usually call the West or the Occident. Among the most conspicuous of these authors is, of course, Noam Chomsky. Others, from different areas of the globe, are not as well known but, as is the case with Talal Asad, they have contributed greatly to the clarification of these questions. As the public at large is aware, the term Orientalism is reserved in certain sectors for describing a distorted way to encounter phenomena pertaining to other cultures or civilizations, or to peoples, still subjugated or only recently liberated, located for the most part to the east of Europe.","PeriodicalId":343953,"journal":{"name":"Nepantla: Views from South","volume":"52 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2002-07-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Orientalism, Anti-Orientalism, Relativism\",\"authors\":\"R. Chuaqui, M. Brudzinski\",\"doi\":\"10.4324/9780429027239-6\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"The question of Orientalism, as everyone knows, has been the subject of intense debate in the last quarter century. Figuring most prominently in these discussions are the contributions of Edward Said and the reactions they have inspired. But these contributions themselves have a long history. Said’s Orientalism (1980 [1978]) is the first work in a trilogy that also includes The Question of Palestine (1979) and Covering Islam (1981).1 On various occasions, Said has reconsidered and refined the positions he took in Orientalism. Almost seventeen years after the first edition of this book, Said wrote the article “East Isn’t East: The Impending End of the Age of Orientalism” (1995).2 In fact he had already reassessed the question in “Orientalism Reconsidered” (Said 1985).3 Orientalism has met with unique fortune. The culmination of several decades of critical research, the bookhas served as the point of departure for new contributions by authors from different parts of the planet—and not only from the territories, nations, and ethnic groups that have endured the centuries-old expansion of Europe and of Europe’s extensions. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
众所周知,在过去的25年里,东方学的问题一直是激烈争论的主题。在这些讨论中最突出的是爱德华·萨义德的贡献和他们所激发的反应。但这些贡献本身有着悠久的历史。赛义德的《东方主义》(1980[1978])是他三部曲中的第一部,其他三部曲还包括《巴勒斯坦问题》(1979)和《覆盖伊斯兰》(1981)在不同的场合,赛义德重新思考和完善了他在东方主义中的立场。在本书第一版出版近17年后,赛义德写了一篇文章《东方不是东方:东方主义时代即将结束》(1995)事实上,他已经在《重新考虑东方主义》(Orientalism Reconsidered, Said 1985)中重新评估了这个问题东方主义遭遇了独特的命运。这本书是几十年批判性研究的巅峰之作,它已经成为了来自地球不同地区的作者们做出新贡献的起点——不仅来自那些经历了几个世纪以来欧洲扩张和欧洲延伸的地区、国家和种族群体。参与这个项目的人也来自前殖民大都市本身,更广泛地说,来自我们通常所说的西方或西方。这些作家中最引人注目的当然是诺姆·乔姆斯基。来自全球不同地区的其他人并不为人所熟知,但是,就像塔拉勒·阿萨德的情况一样,他们对澄清这些问题作出了很大贡献。正如大众所知,东方主义这个术语在某些领域被保留下来,用来描述一种扭曲的方式来遭遇与其他文化或文明有关的现象,或者是那些仍然被征服或最近才解放的民族,这些民族大部分位于欧洲东部。
The question of Orientalism, as everyone knows, has been the subject of intense debate in the last quarter century. Figuring most prominently in these discussions are the contributions of Edward Said and the reactions they have inspired. But these contributions themselves have a long history. Said’s Orientalism (1980 [1978]) is the first work in a trilogy that also includes The Question of Palestine (1979) and Covering Islam (1981).1 On various occasions, Said has reconsidered and refined the positions he took in Orientalism. Almost seventeen years after the first edition of this book, Said wrote the article “East Isn’t East: The Impending End of the Age of Orientalism” (1995).2 In fact he had already reassessed the question in “Orientalism Reconsidered” (Said 1985).3 Orientalism has met with unique fortune. The culmination of several decades of critical research, the bookhas served as the point of departure for new contributions by authors from different parts of the planet—and not only from the territories, nations, and ethnic groups that have endured the centuries-old expansion of Europe and of Europe’s extensions. Participants have also come to this project from the ex-colonial metropolises themselves, and more generally, from what we usually call the West or the Occident. Among the most conspicuous of these authors is, of course, Noam Chomsky. Others, from different areas of the globe, are not as well known but, as is the case with Talal Asad, they have contributed greatly to the clarification of these questions. As the public at large is aware, the term Orientalism is reserved in certain sectors for describing a distorted way to encounter phenomena pertaining to other cultures or civilizations, or to peoples, still subjugated or only recently liberated, located for the most part to the east of Europe.