Saturday, February 11, 2012

Corbin as Transnational Orientalist

"Transnational Orientalism. Henry Corbin in Iran," Matthijs van den Bos
Anthropos  Bd. 100, H. 1. (2005) (pp. 113-125).

ABSTRACT: A convergence of German, French, and Iranian interests cast the career of French Orientalist, philosopher, and theologian Henry Corbin (1903-1978). Corbin's Orientalism was in crucial respects a transnational project. This fact stands in contrast to Edward Said's thesis, which portrays Orientalism as unilateral imposition. The reality of collaboration in the construction of a "mystical East" is reinforced by another paradox: whereas "Corbinism" emerged in conjunction with the prerevolutionary polity in Iran, some of his pupils developed it towards Islamic Republican ideology. Thus, antihistoricist hermeneutics merged once more with indigenous representations of the self.

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