ABSTRACT

Edward Said’s Orientalism, now more than fifty years old, has to be one of the most frequently cited books among academics in a wide range of disciplines, and the most frequently assigned book to undergraduates at colleges.

Among the common questions raised in response to Said’s book: Did scholars in Western Europe provide crucial support to the imperialist, colonialist activities of European regimes? Are their writings on Islam laden with denigrating, eroticized, distorting biases that have left an indelible impact on Western society? What is the "Orientalism" invented by Europe and what is its impact today?

However, one question has been less raised (or less has been done about the question): How were the Orientalist writings of European scholars of Islam received among their Muslim contemporaries? An international team of contributors rectify this oversight in this volume.

chapter |13 pages

Introduction

chapter 1|25 pages

On cooks and crooks

Ah˙mad Fāris al-Shidyāq and the orientalists in England and France (1840s–1850s)

chapter 2|22 pages

An eastern scholar’s engagement with the European study of the east

Amin al-Madani and the Sixth Oriental Congress, Leiden, 1883

chapter 3|19 pages

The reception of the Brill Encyclopedia of Islam

An Egyptian debate on the credibility of orientalism (1930–1950)

chapter 4|23 pages

Arabic literature for the colonizer and the colonized

Ignaz Goldziher and Hungary’s eastern politics (1878–1918)

chapter 5|26 pages

Islamic modernism between colonialism and orientalism

Al-Manar’s intellectual circles and Aligarh’s Mohammedan Anglo-Oriental College, 1898–1914

chapter 6|18 pages

The frustrating authority of Mr. Wells

Islam and the politics of orientalism in Republican China

chapter 7|21 pages

Orientalist triangulations

Jewish scholarship on Islam as a response to Christian Europe

chapter 8|16 pages

“Dieses wirklich westöstlichen Mannes”

The German-Jewish Orientalist Josef Horovitz in Germany, India, and Palestine