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Essay.
13. To what degree is Edward Said's Orientalism still relevant to the depiction of Eastern culture in Western Media?
In this essay I will be looking at Edward Said's theory of Orientalism in Western media, in particular, in film. Orientalism is a way of seeing Middle East people and culture through the Western view. The West has been dominant and powerful in the construction of the image of the East. This essay argues that Western film industry has strengthened cultural stereotypes by which the East is viewed as threatening and inferior. In this essay I am examining an American action thriller The Siege (1998) that gives violent and terroristic representations of Arabs and Muslims, a British comedy drama East is East (1999) that is based on negative representation of Muslim man with strong religious believes and an American action drama Kingdom of heaven (2005), the film that involve a sensitive subject on religious conflict between Muslims and Christians. However, it has been argued, that is offers a fair view on these religions that both have good and bad members of each society. The analysis of these films is reference to Edward Said’s theory of Orientalism (1991) and confirms the idea that the Orient is barbaric, mysterious, exotic and powerless. The all chosen films I am going to analyse contain negative stereotypes about Islam and Arabs/Muslims. They also have examples of Islamophobic discourse.
According to Said (1991) Orientalism is ‘the system of thought by which dominant economic, social, cultural, and political powers establish spheres of ‘knowledge’ and ‘truth’ and it is through such discursive practices that religions, races, cultures, and classes are represented’ (Aneli, S.R. et al, 2007: 23). It tries to an...

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...arkable experiences (Said, E., 1991: 1).

I agree with Schimm (2010) that elements of colonialist narrative are present in this film. The land is represented as it is belongs to Balian who points out that he wants to make it better. The people living on this land are also represented as belonging to him (Schlimm, M. R., 2010). However, they are happy and thankful for what the colonizer did. There is Said’s Orientalism discourse that the Occidental is capable to do more and better for the people than the Oriental (Schlimm, M. R., 2010). The Occidental is more intellectual, stronger and skilled than the Orient is portrayed.

According to Schimm (2010), the film became appealing to audiences due to its message of religious tolerance. The scenes of religious diversities have distracted the audience from embodied colonialism and Orientalism (Schlimm, M. R., 2010).

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