"I have been forced to conclude that German orientalism — defined as the serious and sustained study of the cultures of Asia — was not a product of the modern, imperial age, but some- thing much older, richer, and stranger, something enduringly shaped by the longing to hear God’s word, to understand the meaning of his revelation, and to propagate (Christian) truths as one understood them. But I have also concluded, and will attempt to persuade my readers as well, that this legacy was by no means a simple one, and endowed German orientalism with a cultural ambivalence we have yet to appreciate."
Quote Details
Added by wikiquote-import-bot
Unverified quote
0 likes
University of Chicago alumniPrinceton University facultyUniversity of California, Berkeley alumniLouisiana State University faculty21st-century American historians
Original Language: English
Available Languages (1)
Sources
Imported from EN Wikiquote
https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Suzanne_L._Marchand
Revision History
No revisions have been submitted for this quote.
Categories
Suzanne L. Marchand
12 quotes on TrueQuotesView all quotes by Suzanne L. Marchand →
Related Quotes
"Though generated by thoroughly western rivalries and concerns, invoking the Orient has often been the means by which …"
"Here, however, I will argue that the cultural politics of Orientalistik were defined much less by ‘“‘modern” concerns…"
"There were travel accounts and anthropological disquisitions; there were histories of philosophy and a bumper crop of…"
"..Iamblichus, Pausanias, Plotinus, and Strabo, scholars who wrote in times of relative Greek insecurity vis-a-vis the…"
"But Creuzer was also a product of his age and its aspirations; like Friedrich Schlegel, he was seeking a supra-confes…"
"This opened the way, as Partha Mitter has argued, for Hegel’s insight that since art represented not reality but some…"
"Though they tended to religious radicalism and political liberalism, most mid-century orientalists did not, as had Mo…"
"Despite the author’s commitment to universalism, Carl Ritter’s Vorhalle (1819) already looked in this direction. In t…"
"But the “furious” generation did not want to tarry in positivist particularism, for they thought they now had the mat…"
"What a large number did, however, have in common was the longing to return to subjects left fallow by mid-century sch…"