The Dictionary of Human Geography

(nextflipdebug2) #1

Comp. by: VPugazhenthi Stage : Revises1 ChapterID: 9781405132879_4_O Date:30/
3/09 Time:19:51:41 Filepath:H:/00_Blackwell/00_3B2/Gregory-9781405132879/appln/
3B2/revises/9781405132879_4_O.3d


Most of these critical elaborations have been
historical, but the spectre of Orientalism still
haunts the present. Its imaginative geograph-
ies have been activated in two new rounds of
demonization of the ‘Oriental Other’. First, a
techno-Orientalismhas been directed against
the economic rise of Japan and, more recently,
China, which have both been represented as
threats to the global economic power ofeur-
ope and the USA (Morley and Robbins,
1992). Second, aneo-Orientalismhas been mo-
bilized in the ‘waron terror’ against political
actors, groups and organizations in the Middle
East, and against Arab and Muslim commu-
nities in Europe, North America and Australia
(Tuastad, 2003; Gregory, 2004b: cf.terror-
ism). These new activations have an insistently
practical dimension too, which is by no means
confined to grand strategies and political or
military campaigns. Haldrup, Koefoed and
Simonsen (2006) identified the rise of aprac-
tical Orientalismgrounded in the corporeal
encounters and routines ofeveryday life,in
which Orientalist versions of the friend/enemy
distinction are reproduced through the count-
less ‘small acts’ and stories that make up the
intimacies of everyday life. Seen thus, the
critique of Orientalism is far more than a
theoretical or textual affair: it is also a pro-
foundly political and practical project. dg

Suggested reading
Haldrup, Koefoed and Simonsen (2006); Said
(2003 [1978]); Sardar (1999).

Other/Otherness The Other is that which is
excluded from the Self and through this exclu-
sion comes to constitute the boundaries of the
Self. InPhenomenology of spirit(1807), G.W.F.
Hegel introduced the master/slavedialectic,
which founded an idea of the ‘Other’ that has
since been absorbed from continentalphil-
osophyinto the social sciences andgeog-
raphy. Simone de Beauvoir built upon the
Hegelian master/slave dialectic, in which a
hierarchical dualism defines a superior pos-
ition in relation to an inferior one, to show
how woman has been constituted as the
Other to man. As long as women remain
locked in this relationship, de Beauvoir ar-
gued, they cannot become subjects in their
own right (seesubjectivity). For both Hegel
and de Beauvoir, true freedom requires a
struggle in which the Other comes to risk her
life. Themasculinismof the Self/Other binary
has been taken up infeminist geographiesto
show how some kinds of geographical know-
ledge have been privileged over others.

The idea that the Self is defined in relation
to Others is also a key component ofpsycho-
analytic theory. According to Jacques
Lacan (2002), the ‘mirror stage’ of infancy
occurs when the child first realizes that what
he had until then experienced as fragmented is
in fact his ‘self’. Following this recognition
comes a desire to delimit these boundaries
and thereby to maintain the Self through the
exclusion of the Other. Drawing upon the
work of Sigmund Freud, the relationship be-
tween one’s self and the objects of the world
has come to be referred to as ‘object relations
theory’. Geographers have drawn upon these
ideas to show how the Self is a cultural pro-
duction that relies on socio-spatial practices of
inclusion and exclusion.
The Self/Other duality has come to inform
post-colonialism,feminismand their inter-
section. In his critique oforientalism, Edward
Said (2003 [1978]) showed how European
and American representations of ‘the Orient’
have worked to constitute the self-identity of
thewestas superior to the East. Bringing
Said’s critique together with feminist theory,
others have shown how the interlocking hier-
archies ofrace,classandgenderhave been
constitutive of both imperial relations and
domestic social structures. In other words,
hierarchical dualities of Self and Other (West
and East, man and woman, human and less-
than-human) have been shown to be the build-
ing blocks of Westernmodernity. ‘[I]t is only
insofar as ‘‘Woman/Women’’ and ‘‘the East’’
are defined asOthers, or as peripheral, that
(Western) Man/Humanism can represent
him/itself as the center. It is not the center
that determines the periphery, but the periph-
ery that, in its boundedness, determines the
center’ (Mohanty, 1991, pp. 73–4).
Geographers have shown how the Self/
Other duality has worked to produce and de-
limit geographical knowledge. For example,
Derek Gregory (2004b) has built upon Said’s
work to show how everyday cultural practices
work to produce spaces of ‘the same’ and
spaces of ‘the other’ at the globalscale. Greg-
ory shows how some peoples are represented
as occupying a space ‘beyond the pale of the
modern’, and therefore to have forfeited the
rights and dignity associated with Western
modernityandhumanism(p. 28). ajs

Suggested reading
McClintock (1995); Sibley (1995).

outsourcing A mode of business organiza-
tion that has become increasingly common

Gregory / The Dictionary of Human Geography 9781405132879_4_O Final Proof page 515 30.3.2009 7:51pm

OUTSOURCING
Free download pdf