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India: The Seductive and Seduced Other of German Orientalism: Contributions in Comparative Colonial Studies

Autor Kamakshi Murti
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 29 noi 2000 – vârsta până la 17 ani
Germans of various disciplines not only encouraged but actively framed a discourse that gendered India through voyeuristic descriptions of the male and female body. This study challenges the German's claim to an encounter with India projected on a spiritual plane of communion between kindred spirits and shows that such supposedly apolitical encounters are really strategies of domination. German participation in European Expansion can be perceived as collusion with the British imperialist administration inasmuch as it provided the latter with a justification for existing colonial rule and anticipated future colonial activity. Despite the optimism placed in the post of post-colonialism, the continued presence of European Orientalism can be felt in the late 20th century, hidden under the mantel of global capitalism.Although Germany did not colonize India territorially, Germans of various disciplines not only encouraged but actively framed a discourse that gendered India through voyeuristic descriptions of the male and female body. German orientalist experiences of Hindu India have typically been excluded from post-colonial debates concerning European expansion, but this study challenges the German's claim to an encounter with India projected on a spiritual plane of communion between kindred spirits and shows that such supposedly apolitical encounters are really strategies of domination. German participation can be perceived as collusion with the British imperialist administration inasmuch as it provided the latter with a justification for existing colonial rule and anticipated future colonial activity. Murti sheds light on the role that missionaries and women, two groups that have been ignored or glossed over until now, played in authorizing and strengthening the colonial discourse.The intertextual strategies adopted by the various partners in the colonialist dialog clearly show that German involvement in India was not a disinterested, academic venture. These writings also betray a bias against women that has not been regarded, until now, as a key issue in the literature discussing Orientalism. Missionaries often actively fostered the British colonial agenda, while women travelers, even those who traveled as a means of escaping patriarchal structures at home, invariably abetted the colonizer. Despite the optimism placed in the post of post-colonialism, Murti concludes that the continued presence of European Orientalism can be felt in the late 20th century, hidden under the mantel of global capitalism.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9780313308574
ISBN-10: 0313308578
Pagini: 160
Dimensiuni: 156 x 235 x 18 mm
Greutate: 0.41 kg
Ediția:New.
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Praeger
Seria Contributions in Comparative Colonial Studies

Locul publicării:New York, United States

Notă biografică

KAMAKSHI P. MURTI is Professor of German and Chair of the Department of German at Middlebury College. Her research is characterized by a cultural studies approach that empowers readers by uncovering the political unconscious intrinsic to all texts./e

Cuprins

PrefaceUses and Abuses of the "Aryan Myth"Inventing the Orient: The Discursive Alliance Between Philosopher, Historian, and Fiction WriterExcavating the "Indian" Mind: The Intersection of Gender and Race in the "Scientific" Discourses of the Indologist and the AnthropologistEmpowering the Self: The Traveler and Her Quest"Ob Die Weiber Menschen Sind" - Are Women Human? The Travails of Missionaries and "Prophets"The Eternal Recurrence of the Orientalist: Gunter Grass Zunge ZeigenBibliographyIndex