Orientalism
noun
Ori·en·tal·ism
ˌȯr-ē-ˈen-tə-ˌli-zəm
variants
or orientalism
plural Orientalisms or orientalisms
1
: scholarship, learning, or study in Asian subjects or languages
Knowledge of Islam and Muslims crystallised into what became known, by the late 18th century, as Orientalism—the study of the history, languages and cultures of the East.—Roger Hardy
—now often used with negative connotations of a colonialist bias underlying and reinforced by such scholarshipAccording to Edward Said and other postcolonial critics, much of our dim view of Arabs is a product of an "Orientalism" that was constructed by European intellectuals of the 19th century …—Victor Hanson Davis
"Orientalism" in the study of Muslim societies carries somewhat negative implications these days as a label for literary analyses deprived of social or historical context …—C. C. Stewart
2
usually orientalism
: something (such as a style or manner) associated with or characteristic of Asia or Asians
Strauss's orientalisms are truly evocative: those in the "Dance of the Seven Veils" evoke both warmth and strangeness through their use of artificial scales …—Derrick Puffett
Orientalist
noun
or orientalist
plural Orientalists or orientalists
In recent years Mr. Lewis, and indeed the whole of the older generation of American and European Islamic scholars, have come under attack as "Orientalists," a word that refers to students of Eastern languages and cultures but in the polemics of the moment has come to mean agents of intellectual and political imperialism, scholars dedicated to a discourse that fosters oppression of Eastern peoples by Western.
—Ira M. Lapidus
The burden of being White Men is what hobbles us in our study of Hinduism. Or so Columbia University's Edward Said tells us, and his words are echoed by those who would deconstruct the study of "the Orient" in general and Hinduism in particular. Since Said's shattering denunciation in Orientalism (1978), Orientalists—Westerners who study Eastern religions and societies—have perceived themselves to be hopelessly tarred by the brushes of racism, colonialism, Eurocentrism, and sexism.
—Wendy Doniger
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Merriam-Webster unabridged
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