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5 - Germany's India: A Critical Re-interrogation

from Part II - Travel and Representation

Veronika Fuechtner
Affiliation:
Associate Professor of German at Dartmouth College
Mary Rhiel
Affiliation:
Associate Professor of German at the University of New Hampshire.
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Summary

It is this taking for granted that has, I think defused much of the potential, especially the political potential, of Said's project, through no fault of his own; for he has in effect been Orientalized by the academy.

Saree Makdisi

Moral outrage has some therapeutic value, but as a political strategy it is useless.

Tariq Ali

Why is a re-interrogation productive? I asked myself this question when I went back over my 2001 book India: The Seductive and Seduced “Other” of German Orientalism. The need for such reexamination cannot be more forcefully expressed than in the following words by Mani and Segelcke:

It is imperative for the practitioners of a discipline to identify hitherto unexamined, under-represented, or under-discussed themes, issues, and texts, and/or to revisit those that have been frequently examined, well discussed and perhaps even over-represented, in order to revamp and reshape the theoretical underpinnings of the modes of inquiry that have been pursued.

In my book, I pursued two main goals within the historic specificity of European colonialism and imperialism. The first was to show how India, like much of the rest of the “Orient,” was perceived as degenerate, passive, and feminized, the object of the not-so-obscure ethnological desire of a predominantly male authorship and masculine mindset. The second was to reveal the complicity of the Germans in the colonialist project, based on my conviction that colonialism operated not only as a form of territorial aggrandizement but also simultaneously as a discourse of domination.

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Imagining Germany Imagining Asia
Essays in Asian-German Studies
, pp. 89 - 110
Publisher: Boydell & Brewer
Print publication year: 2013

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