| James Clifford, George E. Marcus - 1986 - 320 pages
...identifies persistent tropes by which Europeans and Americans have visualized Eastern and Arab cultures. The Orient functions as a theater, a stage on which...without being seen, to read without interruption. Once cultures are no longer prefigured visually — as objects, theaters, texts — it becomes possible... | |
| Kathleen Martindale - 1997 - 244 pages
...course was predicated pedagogically on a form of what Edward Said called "Orientalism": we conferred "on the other a discrete identity, while also providing...without being seen, to read without interruption.'""' Our course had apparently confirmed what they already knew—that homosexuals were a despised, and... | |
| Craig J. Saper - 1997 - 226 pages
...fragile, is brought lovingly to light, salvaged in the work of the outside scholar. . . [and] confers on the Other a discrete identity, while also providing...from which to see without being seen, to read without interruption.5 These descriptions of Orientalist discourses sound much like a footnote to the American... | |
| Sasha Torres - 1998 - 294 pages
...voyeuristic implications of this colonialist regime when he notes, in reference to Said's study, that "The effect of domination in such spatial/temporal...without being seen, to read without interruption." 35 The visual framing device that opened all of the Pandit shows — the camera pulling back from the... | |
| Clive Seale - 2004 - 562 pages
...light, salvaged in the work of the outside scholar. The effect of domination in such spatial /temporal deployments (not limited, of course, to Orientalism...without being seen, to read without interruption. . . . A major consequence of the historical and theoretical movements traced in this Introduction has... | |
| Clive Seale - 2004 - 554 pages
...ol domination in suth spatial/temporal deployments 1not limited, of course, to Orientalism proper1 is that they confer on the other a discrete identity,...without being seen, to read without interruption. . . . A major consequence of the historical and theoretical movements traced in this Introduction has... | |
| Jörn Rüsen - 2007 - 272 pages
...The effect of domination in such spatial temporal deployments ... is that they confer on the other discrete identity, while also providing the knowing...from which to see without being seen, to read without interruption."7 The image of the Orient, in contrast to what constitutes the "unobserved" but categorized... | |
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