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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Jackie Assayag
Format: Artículo científico
Language:en
Published: Centro em Rede de Investigação em Antropologia 2007
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Online Access:https://www.redalyc.org/articulo.oa?id=372339154012
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Table of Contents:
  • East and West. Orientalism, war and the colonial present Jackie Assayag Antropología war Empire colonialism orientalism United States of America For at least two hundred years, Western countries have exercized a “benevolent” violence through colonization. Advocated in the name of the “civilizing mission” of the West and inspired by eschatology, this calling held the promise of redemption, both for the colonizer and for the colonized. The “war declared on terrorism” after the massacre of 9/11 in New York, with the subsequent military operations in Afghanistan and in Iraq, revives this tradition of ameliorative inter - ventionism by carrying on the old orientalist-related topoi . Far from effacing the Great Divide between the West and the Rest, the wars of a putatively new type reinforce and polarize the division between “civilized” and “barbaric” in the era of “globalization”. The unfolding ideology of the American, according to which there would no longer be “outside” or “inside”, because no country would now be exempt from terrorism, obscures at little cost, but not ineffectually, the “colonial present”. What now prevails is a sombre vision of globalization, that of a fight to the death between two worlds, extending over all continents, between the “Empire of the Good”, incarnated by America, and the “Empire of Evil”, incarna - ted by Islamic terrorism. But this novelty goes back to schemas that are as old as the United States itself, insofar as this self-proclaimed “exceptional”, “unilateral” and “providential” “imperial republic” has an idealistic or utopian component qualified as “indispensable”. Welcome the the “Wilsonism in boots”! 2007 artículo científico 0873-6561 https://www.redalyc.org/articulo.oa?id=372339154012 en http://www.redalyc.org/revista.oa?id=3723 Etnográfica application/pdf Centro em Rede de Investigação em Antropologia Etnográfica (Portugal) Num.1 Vol.11