Robeson-October issue
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contents
when a child is born,
they say it is before or afer the rice is harvested,
they say their cries awaken the ancestors and they must be named
afer their forefathers,
their parents shed their given name and accept the title of ‘parent’.
rituals are to be done,
animals are sacrifce and the gods are pleased,
there is a new member for the jungle to care for.
the child has multiple parents,
shuttled between households to be taught diferent
skills before fnding their calling,
their fngers either become nimble or rough,
forever etched are the teachings of their parents.
the jungle are their silent guardian,
Unforgiving, harsh and noisy,
they are raised through pain and rain,
but somehow they still make home in the soil that hurts them.
Emma Masing
words:
illustration: nandita sharma
children of the jungle,
built with so much love and pain,
anchored by the roots of history.
Look at what you’ve done to me:
Since I was young my skin has bothered me,
I would cry in the mirror when I got too tanned,
I would cry till my lungs threatened to collapse on me,
I would cry and cry because the white dress my mother picked out for me was too harsh on my skin.
My mother would cradle my face with her fair hands she inherited from her uncle,
And tell me how beautiful my tanned skin was and that it didn’t matter what people said,
And it’s true it doesn’t matter what people say but it matters what I say.
And what I say is this:
My skin is ugly.
My skin reminds me that I am the survivor of rape victims,
of colonisers that couldn’t leave my ancestors alone,
My skin is marked by spots that just don’t want to go away
My skin is painful, so god awfully painful to look at because it just reminds me that I am not white.
I am caught in this whirlpool of self-hate just because I am not the same colour as my oppressor.
What will my grandfather say?
What will my grandmother say?
Teir granddaughter who defed odds to be in this land,
To breathe the cold bitter air of the people who killed their mothers and fathers,
is ashamed of her culture, heritage and language.
Look at what you’ve done to me
Look at what you’ve done to me
I have anxiety of the skin, the heart, the soul and the mind.
When I started university,
My skin became a statement, an issue,
an uncomfortable silence that white people just didn’t want to break.
My skin wasn’t mine anymore,
It was a political statement, and it was for the whole world to see.
My skin and my anxiety became one and
It followed me everywhere threatening to cut my skin just so when it heals,
I can see that bit of white that reminds me of how fucked my self-hate became.
And now?
Now my anxiety is calculated,
My anxiety is now a weapon to use against me,
Fuck the people who tell me that race shouldn’t be a factor in my life,
Tell that to my psyche,
Tell that to multiple breakdowns in public restrooms because the white gaze is the
sharpest thing that has touched my skin.
My inhales are in tandem with the issues of today,
My tears are bottled and sold to co-operations who want to show how diverse they are,
My weakness is their power,
My weakness is a reminder that my ancestors died for nothing.
My skin is a statement,
And I still hate it someday,
And I still want to see the manmade silver of white on my ugly brown skin,
some days looking at a mirror could be the hardest task because my refection,
Shows the eyes of my ancestors who are ashamed of me for betraying them,
And I have betrayed them.
Look at what you’ve done to me,
Look at what you’ve done to me.
I have anxiety of the skin, the heart, the soul and the mind.
It is necessary to frst dissect the term “Western” to un-
derstand what it means and what it constitutes. It is ofen
used interchangeably with “modernised” and these two
terms have links, but ultimately the two terms have difer-
ent meanings and connotations. “Western” can be identi-
fed as being in opposition to “eastern”, or “the Orient”. Ed-
ward Said notes that the idea of “the Orient” was ‘almost a
European invention, and had been since antiquity’, as seen
by Sallust, a Roman hisvtorian who described Asia
as ‘voluptuous and indulging’, noting that ‘its
pleasures soon sofened the warlike spirits
of the soldiers’, a sentiment echoed by
the British in India.1 Tis demon-
strates the notion that ‘the West [is]
rational [...] the East [is] irra-
tional’ and morally degen-
erate, while it lived in ‘lazy
luxury’.2 Tis is an early
example
of
“Othering”
and placing the “east” as
opposite to the “West”.
Tis idea was seen again
in the medieval period
during the First Crusade,
which Peter Frankopan
describes as ‘Te frst
great struggle between
the powers of Europe
for position, riches and
prestige in faraway lands
[...] triggered by the re-
alisation of the prizes on
ofer,’ making the Cru-
sades the frst example
of European colonialism.
In the modern globalised world, how fair is it to
say that “Westernisation” is a colonial legacy, and
not merely the impact of the zeitgeist? Tis paper
will dissect the term in order to understand the lay-
ers of meaning it constitutes when it is applied to
a colonial project such as British India. Te paper
argues that “Western” is a fexible construct and,
though there have been attempts to
solidify it, it ultimately
exists as vehicle for
oppression.
property rights of the new ar-
rivals, to tax gathering, to the
powers of the King of Jerusa-
lem.’4 Tis is a clear example of
Said’s description of ‘Oriental-
ism as a Western style for dom-
inating restructuring, and hav-
ing authority over the Orient.’
A key point, then, to understand-
ing what is meant by “Western” is
understanding what is meant by
“eastern”; it is noteworthy that
“Western” is described simply
as being in stark contrast to “the
East”. Does “the West” exist with-
out “the East”? In order to sepa-
rate the west and east geograph-
ically, there needs to be a central
“line” to divide the two.
Norman Davies describes this
line as being based on an ‘elastic
geography’ as ‘social scientists
invent divisions based on the cri-
teria of their own disciplines.’6
Te term “Middle East” to de-
scribe what is geographically
West Asia is a good example of
the existence of this imagined
boundary: calling this region
“the Middle East” is based on it
being a mid-point between “the
West” (western Europe) and the
Oriental “East” (such as India
and China). Terefore, this term
is based on a western European
view that places Europe at the
centre, and orients the whole
world accordingly.
Tis orientation of the world is
both based on and infuenced
the Eurocentric cartograph-
ic convention that centres the
world map along the prime me-
ridian line in Greenwich, Lon-
don, and was used as far back
as Gerardus Mercator’s original
world map in 1569, that was
used for navigation in an era
that saw the beginnings of Eu-
ropean colonialism.
He goes on to describe how, fol-
lowing the Christian victory on
15th July 1099, ‘Te Middle East
was being recast to function like
western Europe’: ‘New colonies
were founded in the Outremer
- literally ‘overseas’ - ruled over
by new Christian masters. [...]
Jerusalem, Tripoli, Tyre and
Antioch were all under the con-
trol of Europeans and governed
by customary laws imported
from the feudal west which
afected everything from the
However, this convention and
resultant designation of West
Asia as “the Middle East” are
completely arbitrary; as pointed
out by Piers Fotiadis, ‘Medieval
mappa mundi, for example,
centred the world on Jerusa-
lem and placed the east on top.
Te conventional north-up mod-
el is as arbitrary in ‘a spherical
world where there is no obvious
top or bottom and in a universe
where the terms “top” and “bot-
tom” have no meaning’, as seen
by Muhammad al-Idrisi’s ex-
ample of a south-up map in his
book Kitab Rujar - known by the
Latin Tabula Rogeriana in “the
West” - published in 1154.9 Yet
Europe is ofen centred in the
top half, giving it prominence:
‘Eurocentric maps [...] reinforce
a sense of Europe as the centre of
the world, the cradle of civiliza-
tion. To centre the map elsewhere
is to make a political statement
about the world’.10 However, Fo-
tiadis also points out that ‘Tere
is nothing natural about a par-
ticular orientation; it is the dom-
inance of socially constructed
beliefs that make it seem so’,
and those beliefs are key to
understanding
what
con-
stitutes the term “Western”.
Said summarises it so:
[...] men make their own history,
that what they can know is what
they have made, and extend it
to geography: as both geograph-
ical and cultural entities - to say
nothing of historical entities - [...]
geographical sectors as “Orient”
and “Occident” are man-made.
Terefore as much as the West
itself, the Orient is an idea that
has a history and a tradition of
thought, imagery, and vocabu-
lary that have given it reality and
presence in and for the West. Te
two geographical entities thus
support and to an extent refect
each other.
Said’s theory of Orientalism is a
central text in trying to under-
stand the term “Western”. Franko-
pan points out that the view
of Rome as the “progenitor of
western Europe’, and basis of the
British Empire, erases how it was
‘shaped by infuences from the
east.’13 Although he is referring
to the British Empire modelling
itself culturally based on the Ro-
man Empire, this equally applies
in the theory. Te East is present-
ed as the “Other” and apart, while
the West cannot exist without the
East: ‘the Orient has helped to
defne Europe (or the West) as its
contrasting image, idea, person-
ality, experience’ as ‘Englishness
[is subjected to] profound strain,
whereby “the familiar, trans-
ported to distant parts, becomes
uncannily transformed”’.14 Said
clarifes that from the late nine-
teenth century onwards, Orien-
talism was ‘the corporate institu-
tion for dealing with the Orient
- dealing with it by making state-
ments about it, authorizing views
of it, describing it, by teaching it,
settling it, ruling over it’.15 Te
key is that this authoritative view
is inherently one-sided and can-
not be returned: ‘Te everyday
paradox of third-world social
science is that we fnd these the-
ories, in spite of their inherent
ignorance of “us,” eminently use-
ful in understanding our socie-
ties. What allowed the modern
European sages to develop such
clairvoyance with regard to soci-
eties of which they were empiri-
cally ignorant? Why cannot we,
once again, return the gaze?’16
Frantz Fanon wrote ‘For the black
man there is only one destiny.
And it is white’ which also em-
phasises
this
one-sidedness
when it comes to identities, but
‘where Fanon sees the com-
mand to mimic as a subjective
death sentence, Bhabha plays
with the deconstructive possibil-
ities of that colonial stereotype.
He theorizes colonial mimicry
as the representation of a partial
presence that disrupts the col-
onizer’s narcissistic aspirations
and subjects Englishness to pro-
found strain’, suggesting that,
though the majority of the efect
is felt by the colonised peoples,
some strain is felt by both sides
Tis essay has so far analysed the
term “Western” to understand
what basis it had in geography
and in a postcolonial theoreti-
cal context. It is now possible to
attempt to understand what
“Western” meant practically and
how that has evolved. “Te Fa-
ther of History” Herodotus was
born circa 484 BC in Halicar-
nassus, modern day Bodrum,
Turkey.
Halicarnassus
was
originally a Greek city, though
ruled by the Persian Empire by
the time of Herodotus’ birth,
but the fact remains that he
was seen as Greek, not Asian.
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