Oriental Mirages: Stereotypes and Identity Creation in the Ancient World (Oriens Et Occidens, 42)

历史、传记

Oriental Mirages: Stereotypes and Identity Creation in the Ancient World (Oriens Et Occidens, 42)

by: Bjo Forsen (Editor),Antti Lampinen (Editor)

Publisher: Franz Steiner Verlag Wiesbaden gmbh

Publication Date: 2024/5/6

Language: English

Print Length: 341 pages

ISBN-10: 351513672X

ISBN-13: 9783515136723

Book Description

Edward Said, in his seminal book Orientalism, perceived clear links between the ancient Greek and Roman stereotypes of the East and the prejudiced European nineteenth-century picture of the Muslim world, which was considered exotic, backward, uncivilised, degenerate, and dangerous, in contrast with the Weste societies that were seen as developed, rational, flexible, and, above all, superior. However, the reality is much more complex – shaped by both the imperialist perceptions of defeated enemies embraced by all Middle Easte empires going back at least to the Assyrians, and the intermixed admiration and jealousy of the old ‘Easte’ traditions of leaing. Part of the Greek and Roman stereotypes of the East are rooted in the interaction with easte imperial ideals, being taken over and further developed to strengthen common Hellenic and Roman identities. Due to the subsequent free borrowing of these stereotypes and their application to different societies, the Orient has always been a moving ‘(n)everwhere’ with each culture constructing their own Oriental mirages.

About the Author

Edward Said, in his seminal book Orientalism, perceived clear links between the ancient Greek and Roman stereotypes of the East and the prejudiced European nineteenth-century picture of the Muslim world, which was considered exotic, backward, uncivilised, degenerate, and dangerous, in contrast with the Weste societies that were seen as developed, rational, flexible, and, above all, superior. However, the reality is much more complex – shaped by both the imperialist perceptions of defeated enemies embraced by all Middle Easte empires going back at least to the Assyrians, and the intermixed admiration and jealousy of the old ‘Easte’ traditions of leaing. Part of the Greek and Roman stereotypes of the East are rooted in the interaction with easte imperial ideals, being taken over and further developed to strengthen common Hellenic and Roman identities. Due to the subsequent free borrowing of these stereotypes and their application to different societies, the Orient has always been a moving ‘(n)everwhere’ with each culture constructing their own Oriental mirages.

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