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Literary Representation and Social Legitimation: J. L. Burckhardt's Approach to “The Orient”

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  29 January 2009

Kenneth Sandbank
Affiliation:
New York University New YorkNew York

Extract

As a field of study, the Middle East, like its predecessor the “Orient”, continues to exist more concretely within a vast realm of Western texts, both artistic and ethnographic, than it does on the ground. This ingrained disparity between representation and social reality has motivated some scholars to examine this literature as the manifestation of physical or ideological domination. In Edward Said's Orientalism the interpretation of this literature becomes a search for determining social and political forces, the evidence of which, like the nineteenth-century anthropological notion of “survivals”, resides in each text as an implicit network of unconscious images and metaphors. Similarly, Abdelkebir Khatibi, investigating the historical and ethnographic texts of Jacques Berque, views this literature as determined by the requirements of an exigent and compelling, but inherently flawed, Western metaphysic; an “onto-tháologie” which, in confronting questions of essence and existence, must formulate an “other” to realize its “self”.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1981

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References

Notes

Author's note: This paper was originally written for Dale F. Eickelman's seminar “The Arabian Peninsula” at New York University and I wish to thank him for his encouragement and guidance during and since that course. Michel Beaujour's advice on both theoretical and stylistic concerns is also gratefully acknowledged. Thomas O. Beidelman gave me some valuable, if critical, commentary and Abdellah Hammoudi's interest and patience also furthered this paper. I regret that it does not accommodate all the suggestions, stylistic, methodological, and theoretical, which they made.

1 A pointed example can be found in Raban, Jonathan, Arabia: A Journey through the Labyrinth (New York, N.Y.: Simon and Schuster, 1979).Google Scholar

2 Orientalism (New York: Pantheon, 1978).Google Scholar

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4 For example see Said's exegesis of Edward, Lane's work, Orientalism, pp. 165168.Google Scholar

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7 Geertz, Clifford, “Religion as a Cultural System” The Interpretation of Cultures (New York: Basic, 1973);Google ScholarBourdieu, Pierre, “Genese et structure du champ religieuxRevue française de sociologie, 12 (1971), 295334;CrossRefGoogle ScholarDale, F. Eickelman, “The Art of Memory: Islamic Education and Its Social Reproduction”, Comparative Studies in Society and History, 20 (1978), 485516.Google Scholar

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10 Utilizing a methodology derived from Hogarth (see note above) Henry Rosenfeld approaches Burckhardt's texts as a collection of independently manifested and empirical “facts” which he reorganizes, along with those of other texts, for his own unique analytical purposes (“The Social Composition of the Military in the Process of State Formation in the Arabian Desert”, Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute, 95 [1965], 7586), thus ignoring the communicative function of texts which, I maintain, derive their sociologically valid meaning from their relation to the conditions which shape and inspire them.Google Scholar

11 Culler, , Structuralist Poetics, p. viii.,Google Scholar

12 In that the literary text embodies a technology of its own (see Goody, Jack, The Domestication of the Savage Mind [London: Cambridge University Press, 1977]), this statement may be a simplification; but, I believe, one which is a useful starting point in the extension of sociological methods to these texts.Google Scholar