Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Deconstructing Orientalist Stereotypes in Isabelle Eberhardt’s Travelogues
View through CrossRef
The article examines the role of Orientalist stereotypes in Isabelle Eberhardt’s travel short stories. It questions the oversimplified view which considers stereotyping as an individual cognitive process that helps individuals simplify their understanding of people from different cultures. It also shows that this is an ideological construct overloaded with racial attitudes, sexist, and gender issues. The author emphasizes that stereotypes reveal a cognitive bias due to generalizations, out-group homogeneity, and categorizations, and cannot be isolated from their ideological motivations, especially in the context of colonialism. Selected travel short stories by Eberhardt are analyzed: Le Magicien, Le Meddah, Criminel, Fiancée, Le portrait de l’Ouled-Naïl, and La Derouïcha, in accordance with the theory of Palestinian-American philosopher Edward Said, expressed in his book Orientalism, so as to demonstrate the major tropes of Orientalist stereotypes and their functioning in the aforementioned texts. Said asserts that the European prejudiced perspective on the East is the result of stereotypical images, which were built in a context of domination of the Orient. Other theorists are also relied upon, such as Frantz Fanon and Achille Mbembe, Gayatri C. Spivak, Ania Loomba, and Meyda Yeğenoğlu, in order to consider the link between Orientalist discourse and issues of ethnicity and gender. The intersectional approach allows us to examine the Orientalist stereotypes and to deconstruct the racist and sexist constructions underlying Eberhardt’s texts. It also provides a broader conception of stereotyping, which considers the nexus between Orientalist discourse, race, gender, and sexuality. The research shows that the author adopts the scrutinizing gaze of the colonizer and creates binary oppositions between Western, civilized personas and their uncivilized, Oriental counterparts. Moreover, it uses degrading and dehumanizing stereotypes which implicitly justify the “civilizing mission” undertaken by the Occident.
Maria Curie-Sklodowska University
Title: Deconstructing Orientalist Stereotypes in Isabelle Eberhardt’s Travelogues
Description:
The article examines the role of Orientalist stereotypes in Isabelle Eberhardt’s travel short stories.
It questions the oversimplified view which considers stereotyping as an individual cognitive process that helps individuals simplify their understanding of people from different cultures.
It also shows that this is an ideological construct overloaded with racial attitudes, sexist, and gender issues.
The author emphasizes that stereotypes reveal a cognitive bias due to generalizations, out-group homogeneity, and categorizations, and cannot be isolated from their ideological motivations, especially in the context of colonialism.
Selected travel short stories by Eberhardt are analyzed: Le Magicien, Le Meddah, Criminel, Fiancée, Le portrait de l’Ouled-Naïl, and La Derouïcha, in accordance with the theory of Palestinian-American philosopher Edward Said, expressed in his book Orientalism, so as to demonstrate the major tropes of Orientalist stereotypes and their functioning in the aforementioned texts.
Said asserts that the European prejudiced perspective on the East is the result of stereotypical images, which were built in a context of domination of the Orient.
Other theorists are also relied upon, such as Frantz Fanon and Achille Mbembe, Gayatri C.
Spivak, Ania Loomba, and Meyda Yeğenoğlu, in order to consider the link between Orientalist discourse and issues of ethnicity and gender.
The intersectional approach allows us to examine the Orientalist stereotypes and to deconstruct the racist and sexist constructions underlying Eberhardt’s texts.
It also provides a broader conception of stereotyping, which considers the nexus between Orientalist discourse, race, gender, and sexuality.
The research shows that the author adopts the scrutinizing gaze of the colonizer and creates binary oppositions between Western, civilized personas and their uncivilized, Oriental counterparts.
Moreover, it uses degrading and dehumanizing stereotypes which implicitly justify the “civilizing mission” undertaken by the Occident.
Related Results
Multilevel Visualization of Travelogue Trajectory Data
Multilevel Visualization of Travelogue Trajectory Data
User-generated travelogues can generate much geographic data, containing abundant semantic and geographic information that reflects people’s movement patterns. The tourist movement...
Isabelle Eberhardt and North Africa
Isabelle Eberhardt and North Africa
As a woman who traversed the North African Orient in male costume, who spoke Arabic as well as French, and who professed Islam while transgressing many of its instructions, Isabell...
Translating Isabelle Eberhardt: A Historiographic Adventure
Translating Isabelle Eberhardt: A Historiographic Adventure
The wanderlust spirit of the Russo-Swiss Muslim convert Isabelle Eberhardt (1877-1904), who lived a nomadic lifestyle in Algeria, has always disclosed a metaphysical vision that is...
Humorous Elements In Ibn Insha,s Travelogues
Humorous Elements In Ibn Insha,s Travelogues
This research paper carries out the research about Humorous elements in Ibn Insha's travelogues. Ibn Insha was a renowned Pakistani poet, humorist, and travelogue writer. His trave...
Flipping the Colonialist Paradigm: Grigorii Chkhartishvili’s Akunin
Flipping the Colonialist Paradigm: Grigorii Chkhartishvili’s Akunin
AbstractThis essay examines how the Erast Fandorin series by Boris Akunin (Grigorii Chkhartishvili) employs, revises, and deconstructs the Orientalist paradigm through the portraya...
SOCIAL ROLES AND STEREOTYPES OF FEMININITY IN THE ALMANAC «KURIER KRYVBASU»
SOCIAL ROLES AND STEREOTYPES OF FEMININITY IN THE ALMANAC «KURIER KRYVBASU»
The subject of this research is the social roles and stereotypes of femininity in the almanac «Kurier Kryvbasu». The aim of the study is to conduct a systematic analysis of gender ...
Stereotypes of linguocultural community in the mirror of German paremiology
Stereotypes of linguocultural community in the mirror of German paremiology
The subject of this research is the classification of stereotypical perceptions of German people, which imply their collectively determine representations on the phenomena/objects/...
How Do They Stereotype Us? An Analysis of the Perceived Stereotypes of Chinese in Spain and Its Impact on Intergroup Relations
How Do They Stereotype Us? An Analysis of the Perceived Stereotypes of Chinese in Spain and Its Impact on Intergroup Relations
ABSTRACT
As the largest Asian immigrant group in Spain, the Chinese community has emerged as an essential part of the nation's social fabric. Despite the flourish...

