Scopus İndeksli Yayınlar Koleksiyonu
Permanent URI for this collectionhttps://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12514/3596
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Browsing Scopus İndeksli Yayınlar Koleksiyonu by Language "de"
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Article With the Whip Into the Dirty Orient: the Depiction of the Orient in Oskar Mann’s Travel Letters(2021) Avcı, RemziThe present article deals with the travel letters of the German orientalist Oskar Mann\r(1867-1917). With financial support from the Royal Prussian Academy of Sciences,\rMann made two expeditions to the Ottoman Empire and Iran between 1901 and\r1906 to research the Iranian languages and dialects. Travel letters and travel diaries are texts with relatively subjective value judgments, in which people and cultures are often described using ethnocentric\rstereotypes, because a real journey represents a cultural encounter and confrontation with the other that offers unique and\rinvaluable information about the new world. The description of a foreign culture cannot be separated from the subjective\rvalue judgments of a traveller. This means the foreign world in which the traveller moves is represented by the subject who\rexperiences it. According to Mann, the Orientals are people from a place that has surrendered to the West. He separates\rthe Orient from the Occident with precise and sharp lines and divides them Eurocentrically into two separate categories.\rDuring his travels, Mann produced and imparted knowledge about the foreign cultures on the one hand, and on the other\rhand he spread and reinforced images and prejudices as well as stereotypes that led to the ontological differentiation\rbetween Orient and Occident. This essay tries to show that he perceived the Orient with hegemonic thought patterns and\rthat his foreign imagination remained deeply rooted in the classic European orientalist discourse of the 19th century, and\ras a consequence the Orient was devalued. This study discusses the stereotypes, images and pattern of ideas that he used\rto represent the population of the foreign country where he travelled